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ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to evaluate and characterize arterial diameter and arterial wall viscoelastic variability. An animal study was performed on seven sheep instrumented in the brachycephalic artery. ECG, arterial diameter and pressure waveforms were simultaneously measured. Four different hemodynamic conditions were considered: 1) under anesthesia, 2) conscious steady state, 3) vascular smooth muscle (VSM) activation and 4) VSM relaxation. A system modeling identification approach was applied in order to estimate viscoelastic indexes. The linear autoregressive with exogenous input model (ARX) was applied to the single beat pressure-diameter data to assess the arterial system dynamics. The elastic and viscous indexes were derived from the identified ARX model. Arterial pressure and diameter, heart rate and viscoelastic indexes variability analysis were performed in the time and frequency domains. While systolic pressure and arterial diameter oscillation show a similar pattern to heart rate at all frequency bands in control condition, wall viscosity variability does not match with these parameters (p<0.05). Compared with control condition, arterial diameter variability was lower during anesthesia and higher during VSM relaxation (p<0.05). The elastic index variability was lower during anesthesia and VSM relaxation and higher during VSM activation. The different behavior of arterial wall viscoelasticity suggests that intrinsic mechanisms related with vascular tone and vasomotion might be involved in the oscillatory pattern of the arterial wall.
Computers in Cardiology, 2002; 10/2002
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ABSTRACT: Effects of antihypertensive treatment on large arteries may be influenced by the type of drug and concomitant risk factors such as blood cholesterol. To explore these possibilities we investigated the common carotid artery of 20 subjects with low cholesterol and 19 subjects with high cholesterol, all with essential hypertension, randomly allocated to 3 months of treatment with nitrendipine (20 mg/d) or trandolapril (2 mg/d). Carotid parameters were determined by recording instantaneous pressure (applanation tonometry) and diameter (echotracking device) and by modeling the pressure-diameter loop to obtain the Peterson modulus, stiffness index, measured and isobaric compliances, and wall viscosity. Effects of drugs on carotid parameters did not differ, except on systolic and diastolic diameters (p < 0.01), which increased insignificantly under nitrendipine but decreased (p < 0.01) under trandolapril. Blood cholesterol status did not influence carotid effects of trandolapril, whereas patients with low and high cholesterol treated with nitrendipine exhibited significant differences in drug effects on (a) systolic and pulse pressures (p < 0.05), which decreased in patients with low cholesterol (p < 0.01, p < 0.05) but not in those with high cholesterol; (b) diastolic diameter (p = 0.05), which increased insignificantly in patients with low cholesterol but was unchanged in those with high cholesterol; and (c) wall viscosity (p < 0.01), which decreased in patients with low cholesterol (p < 0.05) but increased insignificantly in those with high cholesterol. Also, wall viscosity change under nitrendipine was positively related to the baseline blood cholesterol ( r = 0.64, p < 0.01). Thus, nitrendipine and trandolapril show noteworthy differences in their effects on the carotid artery, in particular with respect to the status of blood cholesterol, but these differences should be confirmed by larger studies.
Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology 10/2001; 38(4):520-8. · 2.29 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We attempted to detect a group-specific north-south difference in carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT), a marker of subsequent cardiovascular complication, by means of a case (high risk)-control (low risk) study in French and Swedish men.
The selection of high-risk and low-risk subjects was performed within the lower and upper percentiles of the Framingham risk distribution of 2 samples of 1000 white, male auto workers (45 to 50 years of age) in France (Renault) and Sweden (Volvo). In total, 299 men at low risk (79 French, 76 Swedish) and high risk (61 French, 83 Swedish), free from sustained hypertension, definite hypercholesterolemia, and cardiovascular disease, were included. Both common carotid arteries, by ultrasonography and central off-line computerized analysis, provided measurements of far wall media thickness, lumen diameter, and cross-sectional area IMT (CSA-IMT).
As compared with low-risk status, high-risk status was associated with higher IMT (P<0.001), diameter (P<0.01), and CSA-IMT (P<0.001) in French men and higher CSA-IMT (P<0.05) in Swedish men. IMT, diameter, and CSA-IMT were higher in Swedish than in French men in the low-risk group (P<0.001) and in the high-risk group (P<0.01, P<0.001, P<0.001). The multivariate analysis of the whole population showed that IMT, diameter, and CSA-IMT were associated with risk status (P<0.01, P<0.01, P<0.001) and geographic status (P<0.001).
These findings show that the geographic status influences carotid artery structure independent of traditional cardiovascular risk factors and that this may affect the mortality and morbidity gradient between Northern and Southern Europe.
Stroke 09/2001; 32(8):1775-9. · 5.73 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Viscoelastic properties determine the dynamic behaviour of the arterial wall under pulsatile pressure and flow, suggesting time- or frequency-dependent responses to changes in wall stress and strain. The objectives of the present study were: (i) to develop a simplified model to derive simultaneously the elastic, viscous and inertial wall moduli; (ii) to assess Young's modulus as a function of frequency, in conscious, chronically instrumented dogs. Parametric discrete time models were used to characterise the dynamics of the arterial system based on thoracic aortic pressure (microtransducer) and diameter (sonomicrometry) measurements in control steady state and during activation of smooth muscle with the alpha-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine (5 microg kg(-1) min(-1), I.V.), in eight conscious dogs. The linear autoregressive model and a physically motivated non-linear model were fitted to the input-output (stress-strain) relationship. The aortic buffering function (complex Young's modulus) was obtained in vivo from the identified linear model. Elastic, viscous and inertial moduli were significantly increased from control state ((44.5 +/- 7.7) x 10(4) Pa; (12.3 +/- 4.7) x 10(4) Pa s; (0.048 +/- 0.028) x 10(4) Pa s(2) ) to active state ((85.3 +/- 29.5) x 10(4) Pa, P < 0.001; (22.4 +/- 8.3) x 10(4) Pa s, P < 0.05; (0.148 +/- 0.060) x 10(4) Pa s(2), P < 0.05). These moduli, obtained using the linear model, did not present significant differences compared with those derived using the non-linear model. In control conditions, the magnitude of the normalised complex Young's modulus was found to be similar to that reported in previous animal studies ranging from 1 to 10 Hz. During vascular smooth muscle activation, this modulus was found to be increased with regard to control conditions (P < 0.01) in the frequency range used in this study. The frequency-dependent Young's modulus of the aortic wall was obtained for the first time in conscious, unsedated dogs. The parametric modelling approach allows us to verify that vascular smooth muscle activation increases the elastic, viscous and inertial moduli with the advantage of being able to track their time evolution. Furthermore, under activation, the aortic wall remains stiff in the physiological frequency range, suggesting the impairment of the arterial buffering function. Experimental Physiology (2001) 86.4, 519-528.
Experimental Physiology 08/2001; 86(4):519-28. · 3.21 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Common carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) progression was compared between 4 years of treatment with nifedipine and diuretic.
This study, ancillary to the International Nifedipine GITS Study: Intervention as a Goal in Hypertension Treatment (INSIGHT), involved nifedipine 30 mg or co-amilozide (hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg and amiloride 2.5 mg) with optional subsequent titration. Among 439 randomized hypertensive patients, 324 had >/=1 year of follow-up (intent-to-treat group), and 242 completed follow-up (until-end-of-study group). Ultrasonography was performed at baseline, 4 months later, and then every year. Central computerized reading provided far-wall IMT, diameter, and cross-sectional area IMT (CSA-IMT). The primary outcome was IMT progression rate (slope of IMT-time regression). Secondary outcomes were changes from baseline (Delta) in IMT, diameter, and CSA-IMT. In the until-end-of-study population, between-treatment differences existed in IMT progression rate (P=0.002), Delta IMT (P=0.001), and Delta CSA-IMT (P=0.006), because IMT progressed on co-amilozide but not on nifedipine. In the intent-to-treat population, treatment differences existed in Delta IMT (P=0.004) and Delta CSA-IMT (P=0.04) but not in IMT progression rate (P=0.09). Patients with >/=2, 3, or 4 years of follow-up showed treatment differences in IMT progression rate (P=0.04, 0.004, 0.007, respectively), Delta IMT (P=0.005, 0.001, 0.005), and Delta CSA-IMT (P=0.025, 0.013, 0.015). Diameter decreased more on co-amilozide than on nifedipine in the intent-to-treat population (P<0.05), whereas blood pressure decreased similarly on both treatments.
A difference in early carotid wall changes is shown between 2 equally effective antihypertensive treatments.
Circulation 06/2001; 103(24):2949-54. · 14.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The aim of the present study was to determine if endothelial function could influence the complex elastic modulus of the arterial wall.
05/2001;
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ABSTRACT: Two traditional methodologic approaches, the analysis of the arterial pressure waveform in the time domain and the measurement of pulse wave velocity along the arterial tree, have been extensively used to determine the distensibility of large arteries in humans. They have shown that large artery walls are stiffened in the presence of hypertension. However, several methodologic limitations, especially the incapability of these methods to take into account the physiologic pressure-dependence of arterial distensibility, have led to the development of new approaches for characterizing more in depth the elastic and viscous properties of large arteries. The noninvasive recording of instantaneous pressure and diameter waveforms in superficial arteries (carotid or femoral) by means of tonometry and ultrasonography allows, via appropriate model of the arterial wall, determination of the pure elastic properties as well as the wall viscosity of the vessel. Using case (hypertensive)-control (normotensive) studies it has been found that elastic alteration (stiffening) was preferential in the femoral artery rather than in the carotid artery and that viscous alteration (increased wall viscosity) was relatively uniform in both arteries. This topographic dissociation between elastic and viscous responses of the arterial wall to hypertension suggests that the elastic alteration might be a local phenomena dependent on the singularities of the arterial system, whereas abnormal wall viscosity may reflect a more general influence of hypertension on large artery smooth muscle, the likely determinant factor of viscosity. Therefore, the elastic and viscous components of the arterial walls should be considered independently when assessing the development of hypertensive vascular change and its response to antihypertensive treatment.
Current Hypertension Reports 03/2001; 3(1):74-9. · 2.50 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We hypothesized that arterial wall thickening, an early atherogenic alteration, might be associated with smoking differently according to gender, considering the cardiovascular protection of female sex hormones.
We measured ultrasonographically carotid and femoral intima-media thickness (IMT) in 194 men and 330 women without risk factors other than smoking. In men: (i) current smokers had greater carotid and femoral IMT (P<0.01, P<0.001) and former smokers had greater femoral IMT (P<0.01) than never smokers; (ii) in pooled never, current and former smokers carotid and femoral IMT correlated to current daily smoking (P<0.01) and lifelong smoking (P<0.001); and (iii) carotid and femoral IMT correlated to age in never smokers (P<0.001), current smokers (P<0.01, P<0.001) and former smokers (P<0.01), with greater slopes in current than in former smokers at carotid site (P<0.05) and in current than in never smokers at femoral site (P<0.05). In women: (i) IMT did not differ by smoking status; (ii) in pooled smokers and non smokers femoral IMT correlated to current daily smoking (P=0.01) and to lifelong smoking (P<0.01) with a lower slope than in men (P<0.001), while carotid IMT did not; and (iii) carotid and femoral IMT correlated to age in never smokers (P<0.001), current smokers (P<0.001, P<0.05) and former smokers (P<0.001, P<0.01) with no different slopes.
Smoking-related increase in IMT existed in men but not in women, suggesting a possible protection of female gender from early structural arterial alteration of smoking.
Atherosclerosis 12/2000; 153(1):139-45. · 3.79 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The vascular endothelium and circulating blood cells are exposed to a hemodynamic environment related to the pulsatile nature of the pressure and blood flow which influence the morphology, the physical properties and the metabolism of the cells. Among these mechanical forces, shear stresses, related to the speed gradients and to the blood viscosity, control vascular vasomotor tone and thrombogenecity, stimulating the production of the endothelial factors of relaxation or contraction, of the coagulation factors or activating erythrocyte and platelet aggregation or disaggregation phenomena. Low shear stress is considered to be a critical factor in the causation of thickening of the arterial wall and in the formation of atheromatous plaques. These plaques develop predominantly in specific parts of the arterial tree where asymmetries in the velocity profiles occur. A close relationship has been found in a large general population between plasma viscosity and thickening of the carotid bifurcation. The blood cells share the same environment as the endothelial cells. Thus, the shear stresses to which the erythrocytes are submitted is a major determinant of the blood viscosity. Shear is also an important physiological parameter regulating platelet aggregation in flowing suspensions. However, in vivo, the response of platelets depends on the balance between activation of the platelets by shear and the same rheological forces acting on the endothelial cells which produce mediators which inhibit this activation in order to maintain blood fluidity.
Journal des Maladies Vasculaires 11/2000; 25(4):237-40. · 0.54 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Plasma viscosity and intima-media thickness (IMT) are frequently associated with cardiovascular disease and its risk factors. We evaluated the association of rheologic and vascular factors in asymptomatic subjects. Plasma viscosity (coaxial cylinder viscometry) and both preintrusive and intrusive atherosclerosis in the carotid arteries (ultrasonography) were investigated in 246 men and 337 women aged 17 to 65 years from the AXA study, a prospective cohort of healthy workers. Plasma viscosity was positively related to age-adjusted mean bifurcation carotid artery IMT (P < .01 for men; P < .04 for women) and maximum carotid artery IMT (P < .01 for men; P < .02 for women), but not to mean common carotid artery IMT. Multivariate adjustment affected these relations to a greater extent in men than in women. The odds ratio (range) of having intrusive atherosclerosis in relation to 1 SD greater plasma viscosity was 2.27 (1.52 -3.38) in men and 1.63 (1.17-2.26) in women. Adjustment of age, waist-to-hip ratio, smoking, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, diabetes, and fibrinogen had very little effect on the magnitude of these odds ratios. Thus, plasma viscosity was associated with carotid thickening, suggesting that rheologic factors are involved in the subclinical phase of atherosclerosis.
American Journal of Hypertension 07/2000; 13(7):753-8. · 3.18 Impact Factor
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A Simon,
L Papoz,
A Ponton,
P Segond,
F Becker,
L Drouet, J Levenson,
M Marazanof,
Y Sentou,
E Chollet,
J Etiemble
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ABSTRACT: Despite its potential usefulness for assessing preclinical atherosclerosis and cardiovascular risk, the ankle/arm blood pressure index (AAI) has not yet been the matter of study evaluating its feasibility and reliability by nonspecialist doctors in a general population. This study was planned for two steps. In step 1, the measurement of AAI, (ratio between Doppler systolic pressure at the ankle for each lower limb and the highest value of Doppler systolic pressure of the two upper limbs), should be performed by 50 general practitioners (GPs), 50 social security center physicians, and 50 occupational health physicians in 3,000 male smokers, 40 to 59 years, without clinical cardiovascular disease. In step 2, AAI measurement, coupled with echography-Doppler of iliofemoral arteries, should be repeated by a specialist in all subjects with decreased AAI (<0.90) and the first two subjects with normal AAI recruited in step 1 by each nonspecialist. The number of physicians and subjects participating in step 1 was lower than planned (80 physicians and 962 subjects) with the greatest defect for GPs (six physicians and 35 subjects) and the prevalence of decreased AAI was low (28 subjects). AAI measurement was repeated in step 2 in only 12 subjects with decreased AAI in step 1 and in 124 subjects with normal AAI in step 1. Five of the six subjects with decreased AAI in step 2 also had decreased AAI in step 1 and 123 of the 130 subjects with normal AAI in step 2 also had normal AAI in step 1. As regards echographic stenosis, decreased AAI had a sensitivity of 44% and a specificity of 98%. AAI seems more feasible for occupational health physicians and social security center physicians and AAI is also reliable for nonspecialists previously trained, but its predictive value as regards echographic stenosis is poor in asymptomatic subjects, which may limit its usefulness for detecting preclinical atherosclerosis.
Angiology 06/2000; 51(6):463-71. · 1.51 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Our objective was to provide a description of 'normal' carotid artery dimensions which are increasingly used for detecting early atherosclerosis and predicting clinical complications. Far wall intima-media thickness (IMT), lumen diameter and cross-sectional area intima-media thickness (CSA-IMT) were measured on 1 cm-distal common carotid artery segments on both sides by B-mode ultrasound, using an automated computerized edge-detection program, in 133 men and 216 women aged 17-65 years and free from cardiovascular disease and traditional risk factors. IMT and CSA-IMT increased with age in both sexes and on both sides, while diameter did not, except on the right side in men. Women had lower diameter than men except on the left side at 30 years or below, while IMT did not differ between sexes except on the left side from 31 to 50 years where IMT was higher in men; as a result of their lower diameter, women had lower CSA-IMT than men except on the right side above 50 years. IMT was lower on the right side than on the left side in both sexes, except in 30-year old or younger men and 31- to 40-year old women, while diameter was higher on the right side than on the left side in men and women aged 31-40 years and in women aged 41-50 years; also CSA-IMT was lower on the right side than on the left side in both sexes above 40 years. These data provide reference values of carotid artery dimensions and show that age, sex and side of measurement should be taken into account in the interpretation of 'normal' values of IMT and diameter in clinical practice and trials.
Atherosclerosis 03/2000; 148(2):297-302. · 3.79 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The aim of this study is to evaluate the relationship between carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and arterial wall inertial behaviour.
The simultaneous and noninvasive assessment of the intima-media complex and arterial diameter waveform was performed using high-resolution ultrasonography. The common carotid artery of eleven normotensive subjects (NTA) and eleven mild-to-moderate essential hypertensive patients (HTA) were measured noninvasively using tonometry and an automatic densitometric analysis of B-mode images to obtain IMT and instantaneous pressure (P) and diameter (D) loops. A linear discrete time model was used to estimate the inertial index (K(M)) using a system modelling-identification approach.
In NTA K(M) was 0.333+/-0.256 (mmHg x s2/mm) and IMT 0.643+/-0.061 (mm), whereas in HTA K(M) was 0.798+/-0.590 (P < 0.05) and IMT 0.760+/-0.034 (P < 0.025). When all data of K(M) versus IMT of NTA and HTA were pooled in a linear regression analysis, a correlation coefficient of r = 0.61 (P < 0.05) was obtained.
Wall inertia increase was associated with a higher IMT, suggesting that the intima-media thickening might be partially related to vascular hypertrophy manifested as increase of inertial behaviour.
Journal of Hypertension 01/2000; 17(12 Pt 2):1825-9. · 4.02 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A central distribution of adipose tissue is frequently associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and its risk factors.
Clinical usefulness of waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) for predicting the risk of cardiovascular events, estimated with models based on data from the Framingham and Prospective Cardiovascular Münster (PROCAM) studies was evaluated.
These were 552 men and 160 women, asymptomatic and at risk for CVD, aged 30-74 y, recruited from an ongoing risk factor screening program conducted at worksites.
Abdominal fatness was a strong predictor of cardiovascular complications in subjects whose WHR was in the top quintile (> 0.98 for men and > 0.91 for women). The estimated percentage rate of coronary heart disease (CHD, P <0.01) and death (P < 0.01), myocardial infarction (P < 0.01), stroke (P < 0.01), total CVD (P < 0.001) and death (P < 0.01) increased with increasing quintile of WHR in men and women. In the highest WHR, the number of subjects exceeding a 15% risk of developing a coronary event over the next 10 y was more than two-fold greater (odds ratio (OR) 2.60 (confidence intervals (CI) 1.09-6.54) than in the lowest WHR quintiles. Similar six-year myocardial infarction (MI) risks at each quintile of WHR were observed in men in both Framingham and PROCAM models. In the overall population, CHD estimates increased with increasing quintiles of WHR with the Framingham model and an adapted model for estimating probabilities of disease in the French population of the Prevention Cardiovasculaire en Médecine du Travail (PCV-METRA) group.
Abdominal deposition of fat assessed by WHR may be of strong clinical value for predicting high risk of cardiovascular events.
International Journal of Obesity 02/1999; 23(1):90-7. · 4.69 Impact Factor
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P Chanson,
J L Megnien,
M del Pino,
C Coirault,
I Merli,
L Houdouin,
A G Harris, J Levenson,
Y Lecarpentier,
A Simon,
D Chemla
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ABSTRACT: One-third of acromegalic patients have hypertension. Acromegaly is also associated with intrinsic cardiac abnormalities known collectively as a hyperkinetic heart syndrome, which is characterized by an increased cardiac index and decreased systemic vascular resistance. As a result, blood flow should be increased in the regional vascular beds of acromegalic patients. The aim of the study was to measure, using direct methods, blood flow and vascular resistance at the level of the brachial artery in acromegalic patients with a confirmed hyperkinetic heart syndrome.
Twelve patients with active acromegaly (five females, seven males; mean (+/- SD) age, 43 +/- 10 years) were studied. Twelve age- and sex-matched normal subjects served as controls.
Right heart catheterization was used to measure the cardiac index and stroke volume and to calculate systemic vascular resistance in the acromegalic patients. Brachial haemodynamics were evaluated with a two-dimensional pulsed Doppler system (double transducer probe and range-gated time system of reception). The mean diameter of the brachial artery and mean blood velocity were measured and used to calculate mean blood flow. Vascular resistance was calculated in the brachial artery as the mean arterial pressure/blood flow ratio.
Age, body weight, height, body surface area and heart rate were similar in the acromegalic patients and controls, while mean arterial pressure was higher in patients. The cardiac index and stroke volume were increased in the acromegalic patients, at 4.08 +/- 0.47 (mean +/- SD) l/min/m2 body surface area and 116.7 +/- 19.4 ml, respectively, while systemic vascular resistance was low (12.5 +/- 2.1 U). Brachial artery diameter was similar in the patients and controls. Brachial artery mean blood velocity (P < 0.01) and mean blood flow (P < 0.05) were lower in the patients than in the controls (3.35 +/- 1.26 vs. 5.12 +/- 1.74 cm/s, and 16.4 +/- 9.4 vs. 25.6 +/- 11.6 ml/min/m2, respectively). The higher mean arterial pressure and lower mean blood flow resulted in higher forearm vascular resistance in the patients than in the controls (132 +/- 61 vs. 83.8 +/- 47 mmHg/ml/s/m2, respectively, P < 0.01).
While cardiac output is increased and systemic vascular resistance is decreased in active acromegaly, direct measurement of brachial artery haemodynamics showed lower regional blood flow and increased local resistance relative to healthy controls. These results suggest a heterogeneous distribution of cardiac output in acromegaly.
Clinical Endocrinology 12/1998; 49(6):725-31. · 3.17 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: We aimed to determine whether intima-media thickness (IMT) was increased in the carotid artery of subjects with homocystinuria to better understand the in vivo contribution of homocysteine to early atherogenesis.
We investigated ultrasonographically the right common carotid artery in 14 subjects with homozygous homocystinuria aged 3 to 34 years (mean, 13 years) and in 15 of their heterozygous parents aged 32 to 47 years (mean, 41 years) by comparison with 2 control groups of 15 healthy subjects of the same age. Far-wall IMT and lumen diameter were measured with a computerized program, and the cross-sectional area of the intima-media complex (CSA-IMC) was calculated from IMT and diameter. Comparison with their respective controls, adjusted for body surface area or height, showed that homozygotes had greater IMT (P<0.001) and CSA-IMC (P<0.05) and smaller diameter (P<0.05), whereas heterozygotes had values similar to their controls. Multivariate analysis of the arterial parameters with age, body surface area (or height), and plasma total homocysteine in the homozygous and heterozygous groups combined showed that IMT was related to age (P<0.05) and homocysteine (P<0.01), diameter was related to body surface area (P<0.001) or height (P<0.05), and CSA-IMC was related to age (P<0.05), body surface area (P<0.05) (but not height), and homocysteine (P<0.05).
Homozygous homocystinuria was associated with common carotid wall hypertrophy, whereas heterozygous disease was not. Such hypertrophy may reflect a smooth muscle proliferation induced by hyperhomocysteinemia and represent a promising target for testing vascular effects of therapeutic measures to lower homocysteine.
Circulation 12/1998; 98(21):2276-81. · 14.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The detection of preclinical atherosclerosis may contribute to better identifying hypertensive subjects at high risk of complications. Three alterations can be diagnosed noninvasively: calcification, thickening, and stiffening of the arterial wall. Their prevalence is increased in asymptomatic hypertensives and their presence may have important prognostic significance, especially with respect to coronary artery disease. They are also ideal targets to test the efficacy of hypertensive therapy on the arterial wall. Finally, the detection of early atherosclerosis may help to improve the clinical management of hypertensive patients.
American Journal of Hypertension 08/1998; 11(7):882-3. · 3.18 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Erythrocyte aggregation, which plays an important role in the physiological behavior of blood fluidity, was found to be enhanced in hypertension and hypercholesterolemia. While the role of macromolecule bridging force has been widely described, cellular factors related to membrane sialic acid content, which might contribute to the negative charge of cell surface causing the repulsion of erythrocytes, have been less studied. Cell age-dependent changes in membrane sialic acid content (in micromoles per gram of integral membrane protein) were investigated in 24 normotensive and 24 hypertensive matched subjects, each divided into 2 identical subgroups according to a cutoff of 6.2 mmol/L serum cholesterol. A progressive and significant (P<0.001) decrease in membrane sialic acid content associated with an increase (P<0.001) of disaggregation shear rate threshold (laser reflectometry in the presence of dextran) were observed with increased erythrocyte density (erythrocytes fractionated by density using ultracentrifugation) in both normotensive and hypertensive groups regardless of the cholesterol level. However, disaggregation shear rate threshold was significantly higher and sialic acid content was lower (P<0.001) in both hypertensive and normotensive subjects with hypercholesterolemia compared with either normotensive or hypertensive subjects with low cholesterol, respectively. A high membrane sialic acid content variance, beginning in the younger erythrocytes, was due mainly to triglyceride and LDL cholesterol levels (R2=0.49 for low, R2=0.43 for middle, and R2=0.54 for high densities, ie, young, mean, and senescent erythrocytes, respectively). We conclude that an early decrease in erythrocyte sialic acid content may influence the rheological properties of blood by increasing the adhesive energy of erythrocyte aggregates.
Hypertension 08/1998; 32(2):324-30. · 6.21 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to test the value of electrocardiogram for predicting left ventricular mass (LVM), assessed echographically in 136 asymptomatic men with at least one major cardiovascular risk factor. We measured the Sokolow-Lyon and Cornell voltages, as well as the ratio of Cornell voltage to QRS voltage in lead II. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), defined as LVM of > or = 125 g/m2, was 6%, whereas that of increased LVM, defined as LVM of > or = 99 g/m2, the 90th upper percentile of a control group, was 29%. Receiver operating characteristics curves showed that for predicting LVH at 80% specificity, the Cornell/QRS(II) voltage ratio had a sensitivity of 75%, whereas those of the Cornell and Sokolow-Lyon voltages were 50% and 12.5%, respectively. For predicting increased LVM at 80% specificity, the Cornell/QRS(II) voltage ratio had a sensitivity of 56%, whereas the sensitivities of the Cornell and Sokolow-Lyon voltages were 36% and 22%, respectively. We conclude that, in constrast with the Sokolow-Lyon voltage, the new dimensionless Cornell/QRS(II) voltage shows a sensitivity at a high specificity value at least as acceptable as that of the Cornell voltage for predicting borderline-high LVM in a population with a low prevalence of LVH.
American Journal of Hypertension 07/1998; 11(7):861-5. · 3.18 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Previous reports have investigated associations between carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and cardiovascular risk factors. Our objective was to investigate this question in greater depth by measuring both femoral and carotid IMT in relation to sex and multifactorial coronary risk. We investigated carotid and femoral artery IMT by using ultrasonography in 326 men and 462 women, 17 to 65 years old. We also evaluated body mass index, blood pressure, blood lipids, glucose, smoking, and Framingham coronary risk. In both vessels, IMT was lower in women than in men. Significant relations between carotid and femoral IMT existed with age and most risk factors in both sexes. After adjustment for age, carotid IMT was related to risk factors in both sexes except for diastolic blood pressure, HDL cholesterol, and smoking in women, whereas femoral IMT was related to triglycerides and smoking in both sexes, systolic blood pressure and blood glucose in men, and total and HDL cholesterol in women. Significant unadjusted and age-adjusted relations of Framingham risk existed with carotid and femoral IMT in both sexes, but slopes of these relations were greater (1) before than after age adjustment, (2) in men than in women at both sites, except the femoral artery after age adjustment, and (3) at the carotid than at the femoral site in both sexes before age adjustment. Carotid IMT in men appears to be a more powerful predictor than it is in women and femoral IMT in both sexes in reflecting multifactorial coronary risk burden, but these differences are partly conditional on age.
Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology 05/1998; 18(4):584-90. · 6.37 Impact Factor