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Noninvasive Estimation of the Pressure Gradient Across Stenoses Using Sonographic Contrast
Author(s) -
Lien Winston W.,
Lee Allen H.,
Kono Yuko,
Steinbach Greg C.,
Mattrey Robert F.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1550-9613
pISSN - 0278-4297
DOI - 10.7863/jum.2004.23.5.683
Subject(s) - bernoulli's principle , pressure gradient , medicine , lumen (anatomy) , stenosis , contrast (vision) , doppler effect , flow (mathematics) , biomedical engineering , radiology , mechanics , physics , optics , astronomy , thermodynamics
Objective. Because velocity measurements to estimate the degree of arterial stenosis are susceptible to local and systemic factors, we aimed to investigate the feasibility of estimating the pressure gradient across a stenosis noninvasively by using sonographic contrast. Methods. Using a gravity‐fed flow system, a 1:4000 dilution of a contrast agent in water was circulated through silicone tubes that had either focal or long‐segment stenoses of varying severity in a water bath. We measured the crosssectional areas of the normal and stenotic regions with B‐mode sonography and the flow velocity with spectral Doppler sonography and calculated the pressure gradients across the stenoses using the empirically derived Young mathematical model and the simplified Bernoulli equation. Estimated gradients were compared with those measured manometerically. Results. Both methods yielded estimates of pressure gradients that correlated with measured gradients ( r > 0.988). In focal and long‐segment stenoses, the Young model yielded gradients that agreed more closely with manometerically measured values than the Bernoulli equation (±8% versus −24%–57%). Both methods were highly dependent on the ability to measure the luminal cross‐sectional area. The presence of sonographic contrast in the vascular lumen highlighted the inner wall, allowing the accurate measurement of the luminal area to ±3.0%. Conclusions. The pressure gradient can be estimated across stenoses noninvasively. The Young model was more accurate than the simplified Bernoulli equation in this model using steady flow. Estimated gradients are highly dependent on the definition of the vascular lumen, a process aided by the use of sonographic contrast.