Conclusions on the measurement of arterial wall thickness: anatomic, physiologic and methodologic considerations


Autoria(s): Devereux R. B.; Waeber B.; Roman M. J.
Data(s)

1992

Resumo

AIM: To discuss the use of new ultrasonic techniques that make it possible to visualize elastic (carotid) and muscular (radial) capacitance arteries non-invasively. RESULTS OF DATA REVIEW: Measurements of carotid wall thickness and the detection of atheromas are related to arterial pressure, to other risk factors and to the risk of subsequent complications. The use of high-frequency ultrasound (7.5-10 MHz), measurements of far wall thicknesses in areas free of atheromas at end-diastole (by ECG gating or pressure waveform recording) and descriptions of the size and characteristics of atherosclerotic plaques allow a non-invasive assessment of vascular hypertrophy and atherosclerosis in hypertensive patients. CONCLUSIONS: Careful attention to methodologic and physiologic factors is needed to provide accurate information about the anatomy of the dynamically pulsating arterial tree.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_19973B8329CE

pmid:1432312

isbn:0952-1178

isiid:A1992JQ02200030

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of Hypertension. Supplement, vol. 10, no. 6, pp. S119-21

Palavras-Chave #Arteries/*anatomy & histology/physiology/ultrasonographyArteriosclerosis/complications/physiopathology/*ultrasonographyBlood PressureCarotid Arteries/anatomy & histology/ultrasonographyHumansHypertension/complications/ultrasonographyHypertrophyUltrasonography/methods
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article