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Carotid artery longitudinal wall motion is associated with local blood velocity and left ventricular rotational, but not longitudinal, mechanics
Author(s) -
Au Jason S.,
Ditor David S.,
MacDonald Maureen J.,
Stöhr Eric J.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.12872
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiac cycle , cardiology , basal (medicine) , common carotid artery , ultrasound , displacement (psychology) , carotid arteries , anatomy , radiology , psychology , insulin , psychotherapist
Recent studies have identified a predictable movement pattern of the common carotid artery wall in the longitudinal direction. While there is evidence that the magnitude of this carotid artery longitudinal wall motion ( CALM ) is sensitive to cardiovascular health status, little is known about the determinants of CALM . The purpose of this integrative study was to evaluate the contribution of left ventricular ( LV ) cardiac motion and local blood velocity to CALM . Simultaneous ultrasound measurements of CALM , common carotid artery mean blood velocity ( MBV ), and left ventricular motion were performed in ten young, healthy individuals (6 males; 22 ± 1 years). Peak anterograde CALM occurred at a similar time as peak MBV (18.57 ± 3.98% vs. 18.53 ± 2.81% cardiac cycle; t ‐test: P  =   0.94; ICC : 0.79, P  <   0.01). The timing of maximum retrograde CALM displacement was different, but related, to both peak apical (41.00 ± 7.81% vs. 35.33 ± 5.79% cardiac cycle; t ‐test: P  <   0.01; ICC : 0.79, P  <   0.01) and basal rotation (41.80 ± 6.12% vs. 37.30 ± 5.66% cardiac cycle; t ‐test: P  <   0.01; ICC : 0.74, P  <   0.01) with peak cardiac displacements preceding peak CALM displacements in both cases. The association between basal rotation and retrograde CALM was further supported by strong correlations between their peak magnitudes ( r  = −0.70, P  =   0.02), whereas the magnitude of septal longitudinal displacement was not associated with peak CALM ( r  = 0.11, P  =   0.77). These results suggest that the rotational mechanical movement of the LV base may be closely associated with longitudinal mechanics in the carotid artery. This finding may have important implications for interpreting the complex relationship between ventricular and vascular function.

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