Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction

Flow mediated dilatation (FMD) is an accepted, non-invasive measure of endothelial function. FMD measures the capacity of the endothelium to respond to a stimulus but does not assess resting vascular tone. Prior to the measurement of FMD, the radial artery constricts as blood flow to the hand is int...

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Published in:Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
Main Authors: Lytvyn, Yuliya, Liuni, Andrew, Luca, MaryClare, Gori, Tommaso, Parker, John D
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health) 2014
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/atvb.34.suppl_1.317
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spelling crovidcr:10.1161/atvb.34.suppl_1.317 2023-05-15T16:32:13+02:00 Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction Lytvyn, Yuliya Liuni, Andrew Luca, MaryClare Gori, Tommaso Parker, John D 2014 http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/atvb.34.suppl_1.317 en eng Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health) Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology volume 34, issue suppl_1 ISSN 1079-5642 1524-4636 Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine journal-article 2014 crovidcr https://doi.org/10.1161/atvb.34.suppl_1.317 2022-05-29T06:48:48Z Flow mediated dilatation (FMD) is an accepted, non-invasive measure of endothelial function. FMD measures the capacity of the endothelium to respond to a stimulus but does not assess resting vascular tone. Prior to the measurement of FMD, the radial artery constricts as blood flow to the hand is interrupted, a phenomenon termed low-flow mediated constriction (FMC). The mechanisms of FMC remain poorly understood, however this measure is complementary to FMD. For example, exercise leads to vascular stimulation with an acute reduction in FMD but a reciprocal increase in FMC. It was hypothesized that interventions, which modify vascular nitric oxide bioavailability and alter endothelial function, impact FMC in normal subjects. The first protocol examined the impact of continuous therapy with transdermal nitroglycerin (GTN) on FMD and FMC (n = 18). After 5-7 days of GTN therapy, radial artery size was larger than before GTN (P < 0.01), FMD was reduced (P < 0.02, fig) but FMC was unchanged. In the second protocol (n = 8), vascular responses were assessed during sustained GTN therapy and 2 hours after GTN removal. FMD was blunted in the presence of GTN and remained blunted 2 hours after GTN removal (P < 0.01, fig), when vessel diameter had returned to baseline, but FMC was unchanged. In a third protocol (n = 14), the effect of inhaled salbutamol on vascular function was examined. Following stimulation with salbutamol, FMD was depressed (P < 0.02, fig) but FMC was not changed. These observations demonstrate that FMC does not change in response to sustained therapy with GTN, an intervention associated with marked abnormalities in endothelium dependent vasomotor responses, nor in response to beta-2 adrenergic receptor stimulation, an intervention known to acutely modify endothelial function. Both interventions are felt to mediate their effects through modification of nitric oxide bioavailability. Therefore, these findings confirm that FMC is not primarily dependent on nitric oxide. Article in Journal/Newspaper GTN-P Ovid (via Crossref) Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology 34 suppl_1
institution Open Polar
collection Ovid (via Crossref)
op_collection_id crovidcr
language English
topic Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
spellingShingle Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Lytvyn, Yuliya
Liuni, Andrew
Luca, MaryClare
Gori, Tommaso
Parker, John D
Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction
topic_facet Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
description Flow mediated dilatation (FMD) is an accepted, non-invasive measure of endothelial function. FMD measures the capacity of the endothelium to respond to a stimulus but does not assess resting vascular tone. Prior to the measurement of FMD, the radial artery constricts as blood flow to the hand is interrupted, a phenomenon termed low-flow mediated constriction (FMC). The mechanisms of FMC remain poorly understood, however this measure is complementary to FMD. For example, exercise leads to vascular stimulation with an acute reduction in FMD but a reciprocal increase in FMC. It was hypothesized that interventions, which modify vascular nitric oxide bioavailability and alter endothelial function, impact FMC in normal subjects. The first protocol examined the impact of continuous therapy with transdermal nitroglycerin (GTN) on FMD and FMC (n = 18). After 5-7 days of GTN therapy, radial artery size was larger than before GTN (P < 0.01), FMD was reduced (P < 0.02, fig) but FMC was unchanged. In the second protocol (n = 8), vascular responses were assessed during sustained GTN therapy and 2 hours after GTN removal. FMD was blunted in the presence of GTN and remained blunted 2 hours after GTN removal (P < 0.01, fig), when vessel diameter had returned to baseline, but FMC was unchanged. In a third protocol (n = 14), the effect of inhaled salbutamol on vascular function was examined. Following stimulation with salbutamol, FMD was depressed (P < 0.02, fig) but FMC was not changed. These observations demonstrate that FMC does not change in response to sustained therapy with GTN, an intervention associated with marked abnormalities in endothelium dependent vasomotor responses, nor in response to beta-2 adrenergic receptor stimulation, an intervention known to acutely modify endothelial function. Both interventions are felt to mediate their effects through modification of nitric oxide bioavailability. Therefore, these findings confirm that FMC is not primarily dependent on nitric oxide.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lytvyn, Yuliya
Liuni, Andrew
Luca, MaryClare
Gori, Tommaso
Parker, John D
author_facet Lytvyn, Yuliya
Liuni, Andrew
Luca, MaryClare
Gori, Tommaso
Parker, John D
author_sort Lytvyn, Yuliya
title Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction
title_short Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction
title_full Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction
title_fullStr Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction
title_full_unstemmed Abstract 317: Observations Concerning Changes in Flow-Mediated Dilatation Versus Low Flow--Mediated Constriction
title_sort abstract 317: observations concerning changes in flow-mediated dilatation versus low flow--mediated constriction
publisher Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
publishDate 2014
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/atvb.34.suppl_1.317
genre GTN-P
genre_facet GTN-P
op_source Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
volume 34, issue suppl_1
ISSN 1079-5642 1524-4636
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1161/atvb.34.suppl_1.317
container_title Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
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