Vol. 281, Issue 3, H1093-H1103, September 2001
Time course of forearm arterial compliance changes during
reactive hyperemia
Damiano
Baldassarre1,
Mauro
Amato1,
Carlo
Palombo2,
Carmela
Morizzo2,
Linda
Pustina1, and
Cesare R.
Sirtori1
1 E. Grossi Paoletti Center, Department of Pharmacological
Sciences, University of Milan, Milan 20133; and 2 Department of
Internal Medicine, University of Pisa, Pisa 56100, Italy
 |
ABSTRACT |
Ultrasonic studies have shown that arterial
compliance increases after prolonged ischemia. The objective of
the present study was to develop an alternative plethysmographic method
to investigate compliance, exploring validity and clinical
applicability. Forearm pulse volume (FPV) and blood pressure (BP) were
used to establish the FPV-BP relationship. Forearm arterial compliance
(FAC) was measured, and the area under the FAC-BP curve
(FACAUC) was determined. The time course curve of
compliance changes during reactive hyperemia was obtained by continuous
measurements of FACAUC for 20 s before and for
300 s after arterial occlusion. This technique allows us to
effectively assess compliance changes during reactive hyperemia. Furthermore, the selected measurement protocol indicated the necessity for continuous measurements to detect "true" maximal
FACAUC changes. On multivariate analysis,
preischemic FACAUC was mainly affected by sex,
peak FACAUC was affected by sex and systolic BP,
percent changes were affected by plasma high-density and low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol, peak time was affected by age and body
mass index, and descent time was affected by plasma triglyceride
levels. The proposed technique is highly sensitive and well comparable
with the generally accepted echotracking system. It may thus be
considered as an alternative tool to detect and monitor compliance
changes induced by arterial occlusion.
plethysmography; endothelial dysfunction
 |
INTRODUCTION |
ARTERIAL COMPLIANCE IS
BECOMING an increasingly important clinical parameter. When
reduced, it may be a potentially useful indicator of the presence of
arterial disease (30). Functional changes in the arterial
wall leading to reduced compliance may precede the onset of clinically
apparent disease (clinical manifestations and/or arterial wall
structural changes) and may identify individuals at risk before disease
onset. A variety of techniques evaluating different arterial wall
functions (arterial diameter, blood flow, and cross-sectional area)
have been developed to measure this parameter (3, 10, 13, 14,
31). Some of them allow the assessment of large vessel
compliance only, whereas others allow the assessment of large and small
vessel compliance, i.e., resulting from changes at the arteriolar
level. At present, there is no consensus as to the "best"
method for measuring peripheral compliance, but it is important to note
that a number of available techniques do not take into account that
compliance is a pressure-dependent parameter.
Independent of the technique, most of the studies published so far have
generally shown that differences among cases are not detectable in
unstimulated conditions but become clearly evident when measured after
the administration of organic nitrates (endothelium-independent vasodilators) or cholinergic stimuli (endothelium-dependent
vasodilators). Because these vasoactive substances must be administered
via a catheter inserted into the brachial artery, this may become an invasive, costly, and time-consuming procedure, associated with potential risk and discomfort, thus severely limiting clinical applicability.
A possible alternative endothelium-dependent stimulus useful for
identifying endothelial dysfunction in humans in a noninvasive way is
reactive hyperemia (20, 27, 34). This stimulus, obtained with a more or less prolonged arterial occlusion, induces an increased flow (27, 34) causing endothelium-mediated vasodilatation (20, 36) and increased compliance (17, 19).
In studies evaluating arterial compliance changes during reactive
hyperemia, the postischemic modifications have been generally measured at arbitrary time intervals of 20-30 s, and the time course curve of postischemic variations was generally ignored.
We propose a new plethysmographic method useful for measuring
forearm arterial compliance (FAC) [the area under the
FAC-blood pressure (BP) curve (FACAUC)].
This method, which takes into account nonlinear compliance/BP
dependence and allows continuous measurements, was previously
validated by evaluating its capacity to detect acetylcholine-induced
changes as well as differences between hypercholesterolemic patients
and age- and sex-matched normal controls (2).
The present study was designed to 1) evaluate the ability of
this method to appreciate FACAUC changes occurring
during reactive hyperemia; 2) assess the validity of the
aforementioned noncontinuous postischemic compliance
measurement procedures; 3) further validate the
plethysmographic method vis-à-vis measurements made with an
echotracking device; 4) assess whether apart from the
maximal compliance changes, known to be impaired in the presence of
several pathological conditions (e.g., hypercholesterolemia)
(17), other time-dependent postischemic parameters
may be related to plasma lipids and other laboratory and clinical variables.
 |
METHODS |
Subjects.
The experimental group consisted of 95 volunteers (53 men and 42 women,
age range: 18-80 yr) recruited from the medical staff of our
institutions as well as from patients attending the E. Grossi Paoletti
Center for the Study of Metabolic Diseases. In view of the
methodological nature of the study, subjects were enrolled without any
specific selection criteria. Oral informed consent was obtained from
all subjects, and the study was approved by the Internal Review Board.
The characteristics of the studied population are shown in Table
1.
At the time of the investigation, 44 subjects (47.3%) were found to be
normolipidemics [low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C)
130 mg/dl], 17 subjects (18.3%) had borderline hypercholesterolemia (130 < LDL-C
160 mg/dl), and 32 subjects (34.4%) had
clear-cut hypercholesterolemia (LDL-C > 160 mg/dl).
Sixteen percent of the patients were found to be moderately
hypertensive [systolic BP (SBP) > 160 or diastolic BP (DBP) > 90]; two patients were suffering from cardiovascular diseases (myocardial infarction or angina), three patients from peripheral vascular disease, and two patients had had at least one acute cerebrovascular event [transient ischemic attack (TIA) or
stroke]. The other subjects were free from established
atherosclerotic lesions (no myocardial infarction, angina,
claudication, or cerebrovascular ischemia) or from arterial
occlusive disease (no murmurs or decreased vascular pulses and absence
of ultrasound-detected evidence of overt carotid atherosclerosis: mean
intima-media thickness < 1.3 mm and single maximum intima-media
thickness < 1.5 mm) (39). In addition, none had
diabetes mellitus and, excluding the seven patients with cardio-,
cerebro-, or peripheral vascular disease, none had been taking, in the
2 mo before the study, lipid-lowering, antihypertensive, or any other
medication known to affect arterial distensibility. In the whole group
there were 27 smokers (29%); they abstained from smoking for the
12 h before the test.
Twelve additional normal subjects (normolipidemic, normotensive,
nonsmokers) were enrolled to examine whether the shape of the time
course postischemic curve might depend on ischemic
duration. These underwent two complete compliance examinations
separated by a 1-h interval carried out by performing two different
durations of ischemia (see below). The protocol was decided
after a preliminary study in healthy subjects (n = 6),
which confirmed that 15 min are sufficient to obtain a complete vessel
recovery after either 3 or 12 min of arterial occlusion (data not
shown). For the assessment of repeatability of the methodology, nine
more normal subjects underwent two plethysmographic investigations 1 mo apart.
Finally, an additional group of 12 subjects was recruited, without any
specific selection criteria, to evaluate the agreement between the
plethysmographic method proposed here and an echotracking device, the
technological "gold standard" for arterial compliance measurements
(35). The ultrasound images were taken from longitudinal views of the radial arteries as close as possible to the side were the
strain gauge was positioned. All the measurements of arterial wall
movements were performed automatically by the ultrasound instrument and
processed to obtain the diameter-BP curve as well as the compliance-BP
curve. To match the parameters obtained with the plethysmographic
method, the area under the compliance-BP curve, defined over a standard
range of blood pressures (70-130 mmHg), was determined and defined
as "radial artery compliance" (RACAUC). In three of
these subjects, the between-method agreement was tested considering the
compliance changes during hyperemia, and, in five other subjects, it
was tested by evaluating the compliance changes induced by glyceryl
trinitrate (GTN) administration. In these last experiments, after the
baseline FACAUC and RACAUC evaluations, two doses of sublingual GTN were administered, and
FACAUC and RACAUC were recorded after 4 min. In three of these subjects, the doses of GTN used were 25 and 50 µg; in the fourth subject, they were 50 and 100 µg; and in the
fifth subject, they were 200 and 400 µg.
Lipids.
At the time of blood sampling for lipid analysis, the subjects were on
a free diet. Venous blood was collected from the antecubital vein after
an overnight fast and anticoagulated with EDTA (1 mg/ml). Total
cholesterol and triglycerides were determined by enzyme methods
(7, 29). High-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) was
separated by selective precipitation of ApoB-containing lipoproteins with dextran-sulfate-MgCl2 (38). Plasma LDL-C
levels were calculated according to the Friedewald formula
(15).
BP measurements.
Heart rate, DBP, mean BP, and SBP were continuously recorded from the
middle finger of the dominant arm using a Finapress instrument (2300 Finapress blood pressure monitor, Ohmeda). This method provides
accurate continuous BP measurements comparable with intra-arterial
recordings (19, 26).
FAC measurements.
The FAC of the nondominant arm was measured by a previously
described plethysmographic method, which allows direct assessment of the nonlinear "FAC-BP curve" relative to each single cardiac cycle (2). Briefly, measurements of forearm pulse volume
(FPV) were made by means of the extensimetric hemofluximeter Angiomed (Microlab Electronic; Padua, Italy). A double-stranded loop of fine-gauge silastic rubber tubing (internal diameter 0.5 mm, external diameter 2.1 mm) containing gallium, indium, and tin was placed around
the upper forearm. Simultaneous recordings of FPV (Fig. 1, top) and BP (Fig. 1,
bottom) were used to establish the relationship between FPV
and BP (Fig. 2, top). The
mathematical model that fits best with these experimental points is a
logarithmic function mathematically expressed as
|
(1)
|
with correlation coefficients ranging from r = 0.72 to 0.99. In 72.7% of the cases, the correlation coefficient was
>0.9 (see Fig. 2, top). a and b are
the coefficients that fit best with the experimental points.
x and y are BP and FPV, respectively.

View larger version (22K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 1.
Simultaneous recordings of the pulsatile change in the
forearm pulse volume (top) and hand finger arterial blood
pressure (BP; bottom) in the preischemic condition
and at the peak value during reactive hyperemia.
|
|

View larger version (24K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 2.
Example of the pulse volume-BP relationship
(top) and compliance-BP curve (bottom) in the
preischemic condition and at the peak value during reactive
hyperemia.
|
|
The slope of this function represents the nonlinear FAC-BP curve
(Fig. 2, bottom), mathematically calculated as the first derivative of Eq. 1
|
(2)
|
Thus, in our model, compliance is confirmed to have a nonlinear
dependence on pressure, decreasing with increasing BP.
The distance between the site where the strain gauge was positioned and
the site where pulse pressure was recorded creates a phase shift in the
systodiastolic volume-pressure relationship. It has been demonstrated
that hysteresis related to the viscoelasticity of the vessel wall is
negligible: the observed phase shift is mainly due to the distance
mismatch and can be mathematically corrected (35), as
performed by us.
To obtain a comparison among patients in isobaric conditions,
FACAUC, defined over a standard range of BP
(70-130 mmHg), was determined by calculating the integral, between
70-130 mmHg, of Eq. 2
|
(3)
|
After baseline measurements (average measurement of 16-25
beats obtained in 20 s), an ischemia occlusive test
was carried out by upper arm pressure cuff inflation, 30 mmHg
above the systolic pressure for 3 min. (In the group of 12 subjects
enrolled to examine the possibility that the shape of the time course
curve may depend on the duration of ischemia, the
ischemia occlusive test was carried out by cuff inflation for
both 3 and 12 min.)
After cuff deflation, the FPV and BP were continuously recorded for an
additional 5 min. The time course of postischemic compliance changes was visualized by plotting the postischemic
FACAUC measurements (each FACAUC value
is the average of 4-5 beats) versus time (Fig. 3). Postischemic compliance
parameters such as peak FACAUC, percent change, peak
time, descent time, time of peak maintenance, and reserve area were
then calculated (24). The procedures and formulas for the
derivation of the postischemic parameters are detailed in the
APPENDIX.

View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 3.
Typical example of a time course of compliance changes
during reactive hyperemia showing the "true" area under the forearm
arterial compliance (FAC)-BP curve (FACAUC) maximal
change not otherwise detectable with noncontinuous measurements. Each
FACAUC value is the average of 4-5 beats.
a and b are coefficients of the mathematical
function that best fit with the descent time.
|
|
A single observer performed all examinations after patients had rested
supine for 15 min in a temperature-controlled room at 26 ± 2°C.
Statistical analyses.
Mean ± SD values were used as descriptive measures of normally
distributed variables; in other cases, the median and range were used.
Pre- and postischemic FACAUC comparisons were
done by a Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Correlation analyses were
performed using parametric methods (Pearson's moment correlation)
after log transformation of triglycerides and plethysmographic
variables. Multiple stepwise regression analysis was used to determine
the relative importance of each variable (total cholesterol, HDL-C, LDL-C, triglycerides, age, and body mass index) in predicting pre- and
postischemic FACAUC parameters. Statistical
significance was accepted at a value of P < 0.05.
The method repeatability was evaluated by estimating the coefficient of
variation (CV) between plethysmographic values obtained during the
initial and the respective replicate measurements obtained after ~1
mo. CV was calculated after the log transformation of the variables considered.
The agreement between the plethysmographic and ultrasonic technologies
was evaluated by estimating the consistent bias between at least 36 compliance readings obtained with the plethysmographic method versus
the same readings obtained with the echotracking device as recommended
by Bland and Altman (4). Each point considered in this
analysis was the mean compliance value obtained from at least 12 cardiac cycles. The coefficient of repeatability was calculated
according to the British Standards Institution (6) and
corresponds to 2 SD of the relative differences between replicate measurements. In addition, correlation coefficients, CV (in %), and
the percent error between measurements were also calculated.
 |
RESULTS |
FAC and reactive hyperemia.
During reactive hyperemia, arterial BP did not change, whereas FPV
increased (Fig. 1). The rise of FPV produced a higher slope of the
FPV-BP curve and, as a consequence, an increase in the FACAUC (Fig. 2).
Before arterial occlusion, FACAUC ranged between
1.85 × 10
2 and 15.2 × 10
2 with
a median of 5.77 × 10
2 ml · 100 ml
forearm
1 · mmHg
1 · mmHg.
After cuff deflation, FACAUC rose in all the subjects, reached a maximum, and then tended to return to the baseline levels in
an asymptotic manner (Fig. 3). The median percent change was rather
variable from subject to subject, ranging from 16.3 to 265.5%, with a
median of 84% (P < 0.0001 vs. preischemia;
Table 2).
Time course of FACAUC changes during reactive
hyperemia.
To assess the FACAUC closest to the real peak value
("true peak value"), FACAUC measurements were
carried out continuously, and the time course of FACAUC
changes was defined. This protocol allowed analyzing the shape of the
time course curve, thus providing the opportunity to understand whether
the peak FACAUC value was maintained for a time period
long enough to be detectable with noncontinuous measurements. The
time-dependent plethysmographic characteristics of the 93 subjects
studied are shown in Table 2. FACAUC reached its
maximal value ~17 s after cuff deflation (range, 2-52 s) and, in
77% of subjects, was maintained for not more than 2.5-7 s, a time
interval too short for legitimate noncontinuous measurements. Thus, in
most subjects, descent starts almost immediately, and
FACAUC returns to its respective preischemic
values in ~63 s (descent time range, 8-196 s).
Repeatability of pre- and postischemic plethysmographic
variables.
Table 3 shows the pre- and
postischemic plethysmographic variables obtained at the initial
visit and after 1 mo in a subset of nine subjects; the CVs are also
reported. Whereas the CV was <10% for preischemic
FACAUC, peak FACAUC and percent change,
it ranged between 16.2 and 62% for the time-related variables.
Agreement between the plethysmographic method and echotracking
device in compliance determination.
The 12 subjects recruited for the agreement study had a mean age (±SD)
of 37 ± 11 yr (range, 27-55 yr). Eleven (92%) were males,
and, with the exception of two smokers and two hypertensives, none was
exposed to significant cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., blood
pressure, lipids, or diabetes).
Data included in the between-method analysis were obtained by pooling
all the compliance measurements obtained in stimulated and unstimulated
conditions, with a total of 36 data analyzed. The area under the
compliance-BP curve ranged from 2.41 × 10
2 to
6.73 × 10
2 ml · 100 ml
forearm
1 · mmHg
1 · mmHg,
with a mean value of 4.15 × 10
2 ± 1.10 × 10
2 ml · 100 ml
forearm
1 · mmHg
1 · mmHg,
when measured with the plethysmographic method and from 1.06 × 10
2 to 5.64 × 10
2
mm2 · mmHg
1
· 10
3 · mmHg, with a mean value of
3.27 × 10
2 ± 1.12 × 10
2
mm2 · mmHg
1 · 10
3 · mmHg,
when measured with the echotracking device. The bias between readings
was
0.87 × 10
2 ± 0.61 × 10
2, with a repeatability coefficient of 2.13 × 10
2 and limits of agreement between the two systems
ranging from
2.1 × 10
2 to 0.35 × 10
2 (Fig. 4,
top). The mean absolute difference between the two
measurements was 0.93 × 10
2 ± 0.53 × 10
2, with a CV of 11.7% and a correlation coefficient of
0.85 (y = 0.014 + 0.83x;
P < 0.0001; Fig. 4, bottom).

View larger version (32K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 4.
Top: agreement between the plethysmographic
and ultrasound technologies. The differences between measurements
obtained with the plethysmographic and with the ultrasound methods are
plotted versus their means. The mean difference and the limits of
agreement are also indicated. Bottom: relationship between
measurements obtained with the plethysmographic system and with
ultrasound technology. RACAUC, area under the radial
artery compliance (RAC)-BP curve.
|
|
Agreement between plethysmography and echotracking in assessment of
compliance changes after GTN administration.
The FACAUC and RACAUC responses to the
two doses of sublingual GTN in the five subjects selected for the GTN
study are illustrated in Fig. 5. In the
three subjects treated with low doses of GTN (25 and 50 µg) and in
the single subject treated with 50 and 100 µg of GTN, a
dose-dependent increase of RACAUC was observed. In contrast, in the single subject treated with the higher doses of GTN
(from 200 to 400 µg), a dose-dependent reduction of
RACAUC was detected. All the compliance changes
detected with the echotracking system were also appreciated using the
plethysmographic device. Interestingly, although quite different in
terms of absolute values, the trends of the compliance changes are
substantially identical with the plethysmographic method and with the
echotracking device (Fig. 5).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 5.
Changes in area under the compliance-BP curve induced by
two doses of sublingual glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) as measured using the
plethysmographic method proposed here ( ) as well as
echotracking technology ( ) in 5 control subjects.
|
|
Agreement between plethysmography and echotracking in assessment of
compliance changes during reactive hyperemia.
The FACAUC and RACAUC responses to
reactive hyperemia in three subjects are shown in Fig.
6. Although not identical in absolute terms, the kinetics of the compliance changes during reactive hyperemia
are clearly appreciable using both the plethysmographic method and the
echotracking device (Fig. 6).

View larger version (17K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 6.
Time-course curve of compliance changes during reactive
hyperemia in 3 control subjects as measured using plethysmography
( ) and echotracking technology ( ).
|
|
Duration of ischemic test and shape of the time course
curve.
In the 12 subjects enrolled to investigate whether duration
of arterial occlusion may influence the shape of the time course curve,
two complete plethysmographic examinations were performed at a 1-h
interval. The FACAUC changes obtained after 3 and 12 min of arterial occlusion were then compared. As shown in Table 4, a prolonged arterial occlusion clearly
produced higher values for each parameter considered. However, the time
required to reach the peak was again highly variable (range, 2-27
s), and the time of peak maintenance was again very brief, not
exceeding, in 83% of the cases, 14 s (range, 5-45 s).
Correlation between plethysmographic parameters and laboratory and
clinical variables.
To investigate whether the different postischemic
plethysmographic parameters were related to laboratory and clinical
variables, a series of correlation analyses was performed (Table
5). The peak FACAUC
correlated inversely with SBP, whereas percent change correlated
inversely with LDL-C and the LDL-C-to-HDL-C ratio and directly with
HDL-C. Peak time correlated inversely with age and HDL-C, whereas
descent time and the reserve area correlated inversely with age and
log-transformed triglyceride content.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 5.
Correlation coefficients among log-transformed postischemic
compliance parameters and lipid and anamnestic variables
|
|
Multiple regression analyses.
Table 6 shows a series of five forward
stepwise multiple regression analyses performed using log-transformed
plethysmographic parameters as dependent variables and
laboratory/clinical variables as independent variables. In this series
of analyses, sex was the only parameter independently associated with
preischemic FACAUC (R2 = 0.19, P = 0.001). Sex (directly) and SBP (inversely) significantly predicted the peak FACAUC value
(R2 = 0.26, P = 0.0001 and
P = 0.01, respectively), whereas HDL-C (directly) and
total cholesterol (inversely) correlated independently with the percent
change (R2 = 0.10, P = 0.01 and P = 0.04, respectively). Finally, age (inversely) and body mass index (directly) correlated with the peak time
(R2 = 0.13, P = 0.003 and
P = 0.02, respectively), whereas log-transformed triglyceride content was the only independent predictor of descent time
(R2 = 0.09, P = 0.005).
Plethysmographic parameters and lipid tertiles.
To further investigate the impact of plasma lipid/lipoprotein levels in
predicting pre- and postischemic plethysmographic variables,
the data were stratified into tertiles according to HDL-C, LDL-C,
triglycerides, and the LDL-C-to-HDL-C ratio (Table 7). According to what was observed in the
correlation analysis, the percent changes increased and peak time
decreased with rising HDL-C levels. In contrast, the percent changes
decreased with rising LDL-C levels and LDL-C-to-HDL-C ratios. As far as
time-related variables are concerned, descent time and the reserve area
significantly decreased with rising triglyceride values.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table 7.
Postischemic compliance characteristics after stratification of
subjects into tertiles of HDL-C, LDL-C, triglycerides, and
LDL-C/HDL-C ratio
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
A number of studies performed using high-resolution ultrasound
methods to assess arterial compliance (measurements of finger BP and
radial artery diameter, allowing the analysis of the diameter-pressure curve) have shown that compliance increases markedly after prolonged ischemia, thus allowing the study of reserve above baseline
(18). In the present study, it is also clearly
substantiated that with the proposed plethysmographic method, based on
continuous measurements of finger BP and FPV (FPV is the result of
changes at the level of large and small vessels level),
postischemic compliance modifications occurring during reactive
hyperemia can be detected even after only 3 min of arterial occlusion.
Despite the high interindividual variability in the preischemic
FACAUC value, all patients show, after cuff deflation,
a significant increase in FACAUC, with percent changes
ranging from 16.3 to 265.5%.
To the best of our knowledge, this is also the first study attempting
to explore the kinetics of compliance modification using a continuous
measurement approach, thus allowing the evaluation of the validity of
noncontinuous measurement procedures often used, by others, to study
compliance changes in the course of reactive hyperemia. The present
findings clearly show that FACAUC changes during
reactive hyperemia are strongly related to the time factor. Thus,
according to the present results, a noncontinuous measurement procedure
may be questionable. These findings, in fact, not only show that the
time required to reach the peak value (peak time) is quite variable,
ranging from subject to subject from 2 to 52 s, but also, and more
important, that the peak value is maintained for a time period too
short (<7 s in ~77% of cases) to be assessed by measurements
carried out at arbitrary time intervals. After a defined interval from
cuff deflation, i.e., 30 s, measured values may not be
representative of the true peak but, more likely, provide a simple
estimate of the ascent or descent phases of the time course curve (Fig.
7). The concept that a noncontinuous
measurement procedure may be questionable is also underlined by the
fact that methodological repeatability is clearly lower for
time-related variables versus FACAUC and percent change
values (Table 3).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Fig. 7.
Time course curves of 3 subjects. After a definite time
interval (i.e., 30 s), the measured compliance value may
correspond to the true maximal compliance change (curve A)
but also to a simple value of the ascent (curve B) or
descent phase (curve C).
|
|
The reasons for the elevated between-patient variability in the time
course compliance parameters reported here are not clear. Variability
may reflect prominent influences not controlled for, such as neural
effects, humoral stimuli, or regional metabolic changes. In addition,
biological variability may, of course, be partially contributory. The
presence of vascular risk factors, as well as a possible influence of
flow-mediated vasodilatation on the time course compliance parameters,
may further contribute to the described variability. Independent of the
mechanism(s) of a such striking variability, the present results
strongly advocate that, to determine true maximal changes of arterial
compliance during reactive hyperemia, a continuous measurement is more
appropriate. A possible criticism to this conclusion might be that only
3 min of arterial occlusion are too brief a stimulus to induce maximal compliance changes. Ischemia was limited to 3 min because the subject's pain, frequently resulting from a more prolonged
ischemia, was a clear limiting factor. However, in the 12 subjects in whom 3 and 12 min of arterial occlusion were compared, we
observed that, although 12 min of arterial occlusion effectively
produced higher values for each parameter considered, the peak time was again too variable and the time of peak maintenance too brief to allow
acceptance of noncontinuous measurements. Thus, in performing 12 min of
arterial occlusion, a continuous measurement procedure also seems to be
essential (at least for the first 1 or 2 min after cuff deflation) to
identify the true peak FACAUC value.
Another important reason to determine the time course curve derives
from the fact that this procedure may provide, in addition to maximal
FACAUC, other time-dependent compliance parameters potentially useful to better characterize possible endothelial dysfunction. This hypothesis is supported by previous studies (20, 34) in human peripheral conduit arteries suggesting
that, whereas nitric oxide is minimally involved in regulating forearm blood flow at peak reactive hyperemia, it plays a significant role in
maintaining vasodilatation during the post-peak phase. On the basis of
these findings, one may assume that the marked increases in forearm
blood flow during the early phases of reactive hyperemia can induce
increased shear stress, which may release nitric oxide from the
endothelium, thus contributing to vasodilatation and possibly
compliance modulation during the mid to late phase of reactive
hyperemia. The mechanisms by which the endothelium, or perhaps
endothelium-derived nitric oxide, can modulate the postischemic
time-dependent compliance parameters were not investigated in this
study. One may, however, speculate that local factors contributing to
flow-mediated vasodilatation of microvessels, such as changes in
interstitial potassium and hydrogen ions, osmolality, carbon dioxide,
catecholamines, prostaglandins, and adenosine (1, 5, 8, 12, 20,
23, 25), can also be involved in the regulation of the
parameters considered here. Although we cannot be sure about the
endothelium-dependent nature of these parameters, it is interesting to
note that some of them are markedly correlated with well-known
traditional risk factors for endothelial dysfunction, such as age
(9, 11, 16), high cholesterol (17, 33, 37),
and triglycerides (28) (Table 5); such findings were also
confirmed after stratification of the studied group into tertiles for
lipid variables (Table 7).
Most of the studies published so far evaluating the effects of vascular
risk factors on vasoactivity after arterial occlusive stimuli have been
carried out completely ignoring time factors. To the best of our
knowledge, the only study (32) that evaluated the effects
of a major vascular risk factor (cigarette smoking) on vasoactivity
using continuous measurements showed improved measurement accuracy and
an improved possibility of uncovering arterial functional abnormalities
in smokers not otherwise detectable when the "time" factor is
ignored. Thus vascular risk factors may modulate postischemic
compliance changes, affecting not only the degree of reactive response,
but also overall duration, or even both of these aspects. The present
results provide further support to this hypothesis. In fact, when
analyzing the cardiovascular risk factors of the examined patient
series, it becomes apparent that, whereas reduced HDL-C levels may
affect vasoactivity by reducing percent changes and delaying the time
necessary to reach peak values, age seems to act only by affecting
time-dependent parameters. Thus, according to Stadler et al. (32,
37), considering time-dependent parameters, one can appreciate
the effects of vascular risk factors not otherwise detectable by
considering percent changes only. The direct correlation between
percent changes and HDL-C and the inverse correlation between percent
changes and LDL-C or LDL-C-to-HDL-C ratios confirm, also in this
nonselected group of subjects, a positive role for HDL-C (21, 22,
28) and a negative role for hypercholesterolemia on endothelial
function (2, 17, 33). After adjustment of data for the
other variables considered, in multiple stepwise regression analysis
(Table 6), sex was the only variable independently related to the
preischemic FACAUC thus explaining ~19%
(R2 = 0.19) of variability. Sex and SBP
independently correlated with peak FACAUC and together
explained ~26% (R2 = 0.26) of
variability. Peak time was mainly affected by age and body mass index
(R2 = 0.13), whereas lipid variables
affected mainly the percent change, significantly and independently
correlated with plasma levels of HDL-C (directly) and LDL-C
(inversely), and descent time, this last mainly affected by plasma
levels of triglycerides. As far as the reserve area is concerned, the
correlations observed with the linear regression analysis did not reach
statistical significance after data adjustment for the other variables
considered. Another interesting finding that can be deduced from our
results is that descent time seems to be related to the presence of
pathological conditions when it is reduced, whereas the same is true
for the prolongation of peak time. This suggestion is well supported
not only by the inverse correlation between peak time and HDL-C, a well-known protective lipoprotein parameter (21, 22, 28), but also by the same negative correlation with percent changes of
arterial compliance (
0.38, P < 0.001), known to be
reduced when vascular risk factors or pathological conditions are present.
All of these results strongly advocate the use of the plethysmographic
method proposed here as a useful tool to measure arterial compliance in
vivo. Because more extensive background information was needed to
validate its ability to provide measurements applicable to clinical
trials, a study was performed comparing the method proposed here with
the echotracking system, a more widely accepted ultrasonic approach
often applied to clinical trials (17, 19).
A high between-methods correlation coefficient was observed
(r = 0.85, Fig. 4); however, by following the
analytical approach proposed by Bland and Altman (4), the
most appropriate method for evaluating the consistency of a new method
of measurement versus an established one, it became apparent that the
two methods can result in a discrepancy in arterial compliance of about
0.87 × 10
2. Thus, whereas the plethysmographic
method may not be considered as interchangeable with the echotracking
one, both provide essentially the same kind of information. Indeed, as
documented in Figs. 5 and 6, although different in terms of absolute
values, the trends of compliance changes during reactive hyperemia as
well as those induced by sublingual GTN are essentially identical for
the two methods, thus indicating that the plethysmographic method
described here provides reliable technology for arterial compliance
measurements applicable to clinical trials.
In conclusion, the proposed technique appears to be highly sensitive
and may be considered, as an alternative to ultrasound, as a
potentially useful tool to detect and monitor in vivo compliance changes induced by arterial occlusion. In addition, the study strongly
suggests that the time factor should not be underestimated when
postischemic variables are considered. It may, in fact, provide further time-dependent markers enabling the objective assessment of the
effects of risk factors, and perhaps of risk factor modifications, on
compliance changes during reactive hyperemia, a stimulus often used in
pharmacological and clinical trials to investigate, in a completely
noninvasive way, arterial endothelial dysfunction in humans.
 |
APPENDIX |
The peak area under the forearm arterial compliance
(FAC)-blood pressure (BP) curve (peak FACAUC) was
the maximal FACAUC value obtained after cuff deflation,
and the peak time was the time required to reach the peak value.
Time of peak maintenance was calculated as the difference between the
time where the descent phase starts and peak time, whereas the descent
time was the time required to return within 10% of the baseline value
calculated using the following formula
|
(A1)
|
where a and b are the coefficients of the
mathematical function that best fits with the experimental points of
the descent phase (see Fig. 3), mathematically expressed as
|
(A2)
|
The percent change was calculated as follows: (peak
FACAUC/preischemic FACAUC × 100)
100, whereas the reserve area was the area under the time
course curve minus the baseline area.
The area under the time course curve was calculated by adding the areas
under the graph between each pair of consecutive FACAUC measurements (24) with the measurements
y1 and y2 at times
t1 and t2; the area under
the curve between those two times was the product of the time
difference and the average of the two measurements. Thus we get
[(t2
t1)
(y1 + y2)]/2, i.e.,
fitting with the trapezium rule. If we have n + 1 measurements of y1 at time
ti (i = 0, ..., n), then the area under the curve (AUC) can be calculated as
|
(A3)
|
The baseline area was calculated as the product of the
preischemic FACAUC value and total time,
calculated by adding peak time, time of peak maintenance, and descent
time (Fig. 3), i.e., baseline area = preischemic
FACAUC × (peak time + time of peak maintence + descent time).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: C. R. Sirtori, E. Grossi Paoletti Center, Department of Pharmacological Sciences, Univ. of Milan, Via Balzaretti 9, Milan 20133, Italy (E-mail
address: cesare.sirtori{at}unimi.it).
The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article
must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement"
in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 19 May 1999; accepted in final form 26 April 2001.
 |
REFERENCES |
1.
Aversano, T,
Ouyang P,
and
Silverman H.
Blockade of the ATP-sensitive potassium channel modulates reactive hyperemia in the canine coronary circulation.
Circ Res
69:
618-622,
1991[Abstract/Free Full Text].
2.
Baldassarre, D,
Gianfranceschi G,
Pazzucconi F,
and
Sirtori CR.
Non-invasive assessment of unstimulated forearm arterial compliance in human subjects. Impaired vasoreactivity in hypercholesterolaemia.
Eur J Clin Invest
25:
859-866,
1995[ISI][Medline].
3.
Bank, AJ,
Wilson RF,
Kubo SH,
Holte JE,
Dresing TJ,
and
Wang H.
Direct effects of smooth muscle relaxation and contraction on in-vivo human brachial artery elastic properties.
Circulation
77:
1008-1116,
1995.
4.
Bland, JM,
and
Altman DG.
Statistical methods for assessing agreement between two methods of clinical measurement.
Lancet
1:
307-310,
1986[ISI][Medline].
5.
Bockman, EL,
Berne RM,
and
Rubio R.
Adenosine and active hyperemia in dog skeletal muscle.
Am J Physiol
230:
1531-1537,
1976.
6.
British Standards Institution.
Precision of Test Methods I: Guide for the Determination and Reproducibility for a Standard Test Method (BS 5497). London: BSI, 1979, part 1.
7.
Bucolo, G,
and
David M.
Quantitative determination of serum triglycerides by use of enzymes.
Clin Chem
19:
476-482,
1973[Abstract].
8.
Carlsson, I,
Sollevi A,
and
Wennmalm A.
The role of myogenic relaxation, adenosine and prostaglandins in human forearm reactive hyperaemia.
J Physiol (Lond)
389:
147-161,
1987[Abstract/Free Full Text].
9.
Celermajer, DS,
Sorensen KE,
Spiegelhalter DJ,
Georgakopoulos D,
Robinson J,
and
Deanfield JE.
Aging is associated with endothelial dysfunction in healthy men years before the age-related decline in women.
J Am Coll Cardiol
24:
471-476,
1994[Abstract].
10.
Cohn, JN,
Finkelstein SM,
McVeigh G,
Morgan DJ,
LeMay L,
Robinson J,
and
Mock J.
Non invasive pulse wave analysis for the early detection of vascular disease.
Hypertension
26:
503-508,
1995[Abstract/Free Full Text].
11.
De Simone, G,
Roman MJ,
Daniels SR,
Mureddu GF,
Kimball TR,
Greco R,
and
Devereux RB.
Age-related change in total arterial capacitance from birth to maturity in a normotensive population.
Hypertension
29:
1213-1217,
1997[Abstract/Free Full Text].
12.
Dornhorst, AC,
and
Whelan RF.
The blood flow in muscle following exercise and circulatory arrest: the influence of reduction in effective local blood pressure, of arterial hypoxia, and of adrenaline.
Clin Sci (Colch)
12:
33-40,
1953.
13.
Finkelstein, SM,
Collins VR,
and
Cohn JN.
Arterial vascular compliance response to vasodilators by Fourier and pulse contour analysis.
Hypertension
12:
380-387,
1988[Abstract/Free Full Text].
14.
Fitchett, DH.
Forearm arterial compliance: a new measure of arterial compliance?
Cardiovasc Res
18:
651-656,
1984[ISI][Medline].
15.
Friedewald, WT,
Levy RI,
and
Fredrickson DS.
Estimation of the concentration of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in plasma without use of the preparative ultracen-trifuge.
Clin Chem
18:
499-502,
1972[Abstract].
16.
Gerhard, M,
Roddy MA,
Creager SJ,
and
Creager MA.
Aging progressively impairs endothelium dependent vasodilation in forearm resistance vessels of humans.
Hypertension
27:
849-853,
1996[Abstract/Free Full Text].
17.
Giannattasio, C,
Mangoni AA,
Failla M,
Carugo S,
Stella ML,
Stefanoni P,
Grassi G,
Vergani C,
and
Mancia G.
Impaired radial artery compliance in normotensive subjects with familiar hypercholesterolemia.
Atherosclerosis
124:
249-260,
1996[ISI][Medline].
18.
Hayoz, D,
Drexler H,
TMünzel,
Hornig B,
Zeiher A,
Just H,
Brunner HR,
and
Zelis R.
Flow mediated arterial dilation is abnormal in congestive heart failure.
Circulation
87:
S92-S96,
1993.
19.
Heron, E,
Chemla D,
Megnin JL,
Pourny JC,
Levenson J,
Lecarpentier Y,
and
Simon A.
Reactive hyperemia unmasks reduced compliance of cutaneous arteries in essential hypertension.
J Appl Physiol
79:
498-505,
1995[Abstract/Free Full Text].
20.
Joannides, R,
Haefeli WE,
Linder L,
Richard V,
Bakkali EH,
Thuillez C,
and
Lüscher TF.
Nitric oxide is responsible for flow-dependent dilatation of human peripheral conduit arteries in vivo.
Circulation
91:
1314-1319,
1995[Abstract/Free Full Text].
21.
Kuhn, FE,
Mohler ER,
Satler LF,
Reagan K,
Lu DY,
and
Rackley CE.
Effects of high-density lipoprotein on acetylcholine-induced coronary vasoreactivity.
Am J Cardiol
68:
1425-1430,
1991[ISI][Medline].
22.
Lehmann, ED,
Watts GF,
Fatemi-Langroudi B,
and
Gosling RG.
Aortic compliance in young patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia.
Clin Sci (Colch)
83:
717-721,
1992[Medline].
23.
Lombard, JH,
and
Duling BR.
Multiple mechanisms of reactive hyperemia in arterioles of the hamster cheek pouch.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
241:
H748-H755,
1981[Abstract/Free Full Text].
24.
Matthews, JNS,
Altman DG,
Campbell MJ,
and
Royston P.
Analysis of serial measurements in medical research.
Br Med J
300:
230-235,
1990.
25.
Olsson, RA,
Snow JA,
and
Gentry MK.
Adenosine metabolism in canine myocardial reactive hyperemia.
Circ Res
42:
358-362,
1978[Abstract/Free Full Text].
26.
Parati, G,
Casadei R,
Groppelli A,
Di Rienzo M,
and
Mancia G.
Comparison of finger and intra-arterial blood pressure monitoring at rest and during laboratory testing.
Hypertension
13:
647-655,
1989[Abstract/Free Full Text].
27.
Pohl, U,
Holtz J,
Busse R,
and
Bassenge E.
Crucial role of endothelium in the vasodilator response to increased flow in vivo.
Hypertension
8:
37-44,
1986[Abstract/Free Full Text].
28.
Relf, IR,
Lo CS,
Myers KA,
and
Wahlqvist ML.
Risk factors for changes in aorto-iliac arterial compliance in healty men.
Arteriosclerosis
6:
105-108,
1986[Abstract/Free Full Text].
29.
Röschlau, P,
Bernt E,
and
Gruber W.
Enzymatische Bestimmung des Gesamt Cholesterins in serum.
Z Klin Chem Klin Biochem
12:
403-407,
1974[ISI][Medline].
30.
Safar, ME,
and
O'Rourke MF.
The Arterial System in Hypertension. Dordecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic, 1993.
31.
Simon, AC,
Levenson J,
Chau NP,
and
Pithois-Merli I.
Role of arterial compliance in the physiopharmacological approach to human hypertension.
J Cardiovasc Pharmacol
19:
S11-S20,
1992.
32.
Stadler, RW,
Ibrahim SF,
and
Lees RS.
Measurement of the time course of peripheral vasoactivity: results in cigarette smokers.
Atherosclerosis
138:
197-205,
1998[ISI][Medline].
33.
Steinberg, HO,
Bayazeed B,
Hook G,
Johnson A,
Cronin J,
and
Baron AD.
Endothelial dysfunction is associated with cholesterol levels in the high normal range in humans.
Circulation
96:
3287-3293,
1997[Abstract/Free Full Text].
34.
Tagawa, T,
Imaizumi T,
Endo T,
Shiramoto M,
Harasawa Y,
and
Takaeshita A.
Role of nitric oxide in reactive hyperemia in human forearm vessels.
Circulation
90:
2285-2290,
1994[Abstract/Free Full Text].
35.
Tardy, Y,
Meister JJ,
Perret F,
Brunner HR,
and
Arditi M.
Assessment of the elastic behavior of peripheral arteries from a non-invasive measurement of their diameter-pressure curves.
Clin Phys Physiol Meas
12:
39-54,
1991[ISI][Medline].
36.
Vogel, RA,
Corretti MC,
and
Plotnick GD.
Changes in flow-mediated brachial artery vasoactivity with lowering of desirable cholesterol levels in healthy middle-aged men.
Am J Cardiol
77:
37-40,
1996[ISI][Medline].
37.
Vogel, RA,
Corretti MC,
and
Plotnick GD.
Effect of a single high-fat meal on endothelial function in healthy subjects.
Am J Cardiol
79:
350-354,
1997[ISI][Medline].
38.
Warnick, GR,
Benderson J,
and
Albers JJ.
Dextran sulfate precipitation procedure for quantitation of high density lipoproteins.
Clin Chem
28:
1379-1388,
1982[Free Full Text].
39.
Wilt, TJ,
Rubins BH,
Robins SJ,
Riley WA,
Collins D,
Elam M,
Rutan G,
and
Anderson JW.
Carotid atherosclerosis in men with low levels of HDL cholesterol.
Stroke
28:
1919-1925,
1997[Abstract/Free Full Text].
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 281(3):H1093-H1103
0363-6135/01 $5.00
Copyright © 2001 the American Physiological Society