Aortic compliance in human hypertension.
- 31 July 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 14 (2), 129-136
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.14.2.129
Abstract
Aortic compliance in normotensive and hypertensive Chinese subjects undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterization was compared by using a newly described method that allows for determination of the pressure dependence of compliance if one assumes a value for the exponential coefficient of the pressure-volume relation of the large arteries. Under baseline conditions in the normotensive and hypertensive groups at mean aortic pressures of 96.3 and 128.6 mm Hg, aortic compliance averaged 1.47 and 0.80 ml/mm Hg, respectively. Compliance in the hypertensive group at a diastolic pressure of 99.4 mm Hg (which was nearly equal to the mean normotensive pressure) was 1.072 ml/mm Hg--still significantly lower than in the normotensive group. During nitroprusside infusion, however, the compliances in the hypertensive group increased to levels equal to or greater those in the normotensive group. Thus, these data confirm that aortic compliance is lower in hypertensive than in normotensive humans. They further demonstrate that the lower compliance cannot be attributed entirely to the elevated blood pressure, suggesting that excess smooth muscle tone may be partly responsible.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Arterial hemodynamics in human hypertension.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1986
- Arterial Compliance in Essential HypertensionJournal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1985
- Systemic Arterial Compliance in Normotensive and Hypertensive RatsJournal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1985
- Systemic compliance: does it play a role in the genesis of essential hypertension?Cardiovascular Research, 1984
- Impaired systemic arterial compliance in borderline hypertensionAmerican Heart Journal, 1984
- Systemic Arterial Compliance and Diastolic Runoff in Essential HypertensionAngiology, 1981
- Systolic hypertension: Hemodynamic mechanism and choice of antihypertensive treatmentThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1979
- Measurement of Aortic Compliance in VivoJapanese Heart Journal, 1971
- A method for the computation of aortic distensibility in the living human patient and its use for the determination of the aortic effects of aging, drugs, and exerciseBulletin of Mathematical Biology, 1961