Pulse wave travel distance as a novel marker of ventricular-arterial coupling.

Heart Vessels

Division of Cardiac Anesthesia, Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Zayed Tower 6208C, 1800 Orleans Street, Baltimore, MD, 21287, USA.

Published: March 2018

Each stroke volume ejected by the heart is distributed along the arterial system as a pressure waveform. How far the front of the pressure waveform travels within the arterial system depends both on the pulse wave velocity (PWV) and the ejection time (ET). We tested the hypothesis that ET and PWV are coupled together, in order to produce a pulse wave travel distance (PWTD = PWV × ET) which would match the distance from the heart to the most distant site in the arterial system. The study was conducted in 11 healthy volunteers. We recorded lead II of the ECG along with pulse plethysmography at ear, finger and toe. The ET at the ear and pulse arrival time to each peripheral site were extracted. We then calculated PWV followed by PWTD for each location. Taken into account the individual subject variability PWTD in the supine position was 153 cm (95% CI 146-160 cm). It was not different from arterial pathway distance from the heart to the toe (D 153 cm). The PWTD and PWTD were longer than the distance from the heart to the finger and ear irrespective of body position. ET and PWV appear to be coupled in healthy subjects to produce a PWTD that is roughly equivalent to the arterial pathway distance to the toe. We propose that PWTD should be evaluated further to test its potential as a noninvasive parameter of ventricular-arterial coupling in subjects with cardiovascular diseases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00380-017-1058-4DOI Listing

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