4.2 Article

A new noninvasive measurement system for wave intensity: evaluation of carotid arterial wave intensity and reproducibility

Journal

HEART AND VESSELS
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 12-21

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s003800200037

Keywords

wave intensity; reproducibility; carotid artery; echo-tracking; color Doppler

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Wave intensity (WI) is a new hemodynamic index that provides information about the dynamic behavior of the heart and the vascular system and their interaction. Carotid arterial wave intensity in normal subjects has two positive peaks. The first peak, W-1, occurs during early systole, the magnitude of which increases with increases in cardiac contractility. The second peak, W-2, which occurs towards the end of ejection, is related to the ability of the left ventricle to actively stop aortic blood flow. Between the two positive peaks, a negative area, NA, is often observed, which signifies reflections from the cerebral circulation. The time interval between the R-wave of ECG and the first peak (R - W-1) corresponds to the pre-ejection period, and that between the first and second peaks (W-1 - W-2) corresponds to ejection time. We developed a new ultrasonic on-line system for obtaining WI and arterial stiffness (beta). The purpose of this study was (1) to report normal values of various indices derived from WI and beta measured with this system, and (2) to evaluate the intraobserver and interobserver reproducibility of the measurements. The measurement system is composed of a computer, a WI unit, and an ultrasonic machine. The WI unit gives the instantaneous change in diameter of the artery and the instantaneous mean blood velocity through the sampling gate. Using these parameters and blood pressure measured with a cuff-type manometer, the computer gives WI and beta. We applied this method to the carotid artery in 135 normal subjects. The mean values of W-1, W-2, NA, R - W-1 and W-1 - W-2 were 8940 +/- 3790 mmHg m/s(3), 1840 +/- 880mmHg m/s(3) 27 +/- 13 mmHg m/s(2), 104 +/- 14 ms, and 270 - 19 ms, respectively. These values did not show a significant correlation with age. The mean value of beta was 10.4 +/- 4.8 and the values significantly correlated with age (men: r = 0.66, P < 0.0001; women: r = 0.81, P < 0.0001). The reproducibility was evaluated by intraobserver intrasession (IA), intraobserver intersession (IE), and interobserver intrasession variability (IO). The reproducibility of R - W-1 and W-1 - W-2 was high: the mean coefficient of variation (mCV) of IA was less than 3%; 95% confidence limits from the mean values (CL) were less than 8% for IE and less than 4% for IO. The reproducibility of W-1 and beta was good: mCV for IA was less than 10%; CL for IE and IO were less than 17%. W, and NA showed a higher variability than other indices: mCV for IA was less than 13%, and CL for IE and 10 were less than 36%. However, two sessions by the same observer and two sessions by different observers were not biased. Wave intensity measurements with this system are clinically acceptable.

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