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Human coronary artery stenosis can have dramatic hemodynamic effects on coronary flow rate and perfusion. To quantitatively investigate these relationships, nineteen proximal coronary arteries with varying focal stenoses (2%-98%) were dissected from fresh post mortem adult hearts and perfused with isotonic glycerol saline (n = 2.7 centipoise) at constant pressures of 30, 50, 75, 100, 150 and 200 mm Hg, while varying the distal bed resistance (r b ) over the range 0.1 to 5 mm Hg/ml/min. Flow rate (Q) and arterial segment pressure drop (ΔP) were measured at each perfusion pressure and r b , and a permanent cast of silicone rubber was made under 100 mm Hg pressure following perfusion. Hydraulic resistance (R = ΔP/Q) tended to be constant at low Q (10-30 ml/min), with resistance increasing 2 or 3 times at higher Q (30-100 + ml/min). Curves of Q vs. % stenosis showed that Q was relatively constant with stenoses less than 70-80%. With a small further increase in stenosis, however, Q decreased dramatically. Furthermore, significant reductions occurred at lower % stenoses for greater demands (lower r b ), a contributing factor toward effort angina, as less severe stenoses became increasingly significant under flow demand. Elastic effects in eccentric lesions produced additional flow losses at lowered perfusion pressures. In addition, a critical relation was demonstrated between percent stenosis and the minimum coronary perfusion pressure necessary to maintain a given Q.
Samuel E. Logan (Tue,) studied this question.