Coronary-aortic interaction during ventricular isovolumic contraction


Article
volume 49 pp 917-924.
Related Files
asset icon
(21487819_OA.pdf, 0.3MB)

In earlier work, we suggested that the start of the isovolumic contraction period could be detected in arterial pressure waveforms as the start of a temporary pre-systolic pressure perturbation (AICstart, start of the Arterially detected Isovolumic Contraction), and proposed the retrograde coronary blood volume flow in combination with a backwards traveling pressure wave as its most likely origin. In this study, we tested this hypothesis by means of a coronary artery occlusion protocol. In six Yorkshire × Landrace swine, we simultaneously occluded the left anterior descending (LAD) and left circumflex (LCx) artery for 5 s followed by a 20-s reperfusion period and repeated this sequence at least two more times. A similar procedure was used to occlude only the right coronary artery (RCA) and finally all three main coronary arteries simultaneously. None of the occlusion protocols caused a decrease in the arterial pressure perturbation in the aorta during occlusion (P > 0.20) nor an increase during reactive hyperemia (P > 0.22), despite a higher deceleration of coronary blood volume flow (P = 0.03) or increased coronary conductance (P = 0.04) during hyperemia. These results show that the pre-systolic aortic pressure perturbation does not originate from the coronary arteries.



Keywords


Automatically Extracted Terms
  • pressure
  • blood
  • artery
  • pressure perturbation
  • volume
  • occlusion
  • perturbation
  • aortic
  • reactive hyperemia
  • hyperemia
  • contraction
  • analysis
  • pressure wave
  • heart
  • reactive
  • aortic pressure perturbation
  • aortic pressure curve
  • animal
  • value
  • baseline