As stenosis worsens, hyperaemic flow decreases from 45 to 19 cm/s (Ptrend < 0.001), while resting flow remains stable due to reduced microvascular resistance.
How do coronary flow velocity, trans-stenotic pressure gradient, and microvascular resistance change with progressive stenosis severity under resting and hyperaemic conditions in humans?
Resting coronary flow is maintained across progressive stenosis severities via compensatory microvascular auto-regulation, supporting the physiological validity of using resting pressure indices for stenosis assessment.
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 0% vs 0%
Abstract Background Our understanding of human coronary physiological behaviour is derived from animal models. We sought to describe physiological behaviour across a large collection of invasive pressure and flow velocity measurements, to provide a better understanding of the relationships between these physiological parameters and to evaluate the rationale for resting stenosis assessment. Methods and results Five hundred and sixty-seven simultaneous intracoronary pressure and flow velocity assessments from 301 patients were analysed for coronary flow velocity, trans-stenotic pressure gradient (TG), and microvascular resistance (MVR). Measurements were made during baseline and hyperaemic conditions. The whole cardiac cycle and the diastolic wave-free period were assessed. Stenoses were assessed according to fractional flow reserve (FFR) and quantitative coronary angiography DS%. With progressive worsening of stenoses, from unobstructed angiographic normal vessels to those with FFR ≤ 0.50, hyperaemic flow falls significantly from 45 to 19 cm/s, Ptrend 0.001 in a curvilinear pattern. Resting flow was unaffected by stenosis severity and was consistent across all strata of stenosis ( Ptrend 0.05 for all). Trans-stenotic pressure gradient rose with stenosis severity for both rest and hyperaemic measures ( Ptrend 0.001 for both). Microvascular resistance declines with stenosis severity under resting conditions ( Ptrend 0.001), but was unchanged at hyperaemia (2.3 ± 1.1 mmHg/cm/s; Ptrend = 0.19). Conclusions With progressive stenosis severity, TG rises. However, while hyperaemic flow falls significantly, resting coronary flow is maintained by compensatory reduction of MVR, demonstrating coronary auto-regulation. These data support the translation of coronary physiological concepts derived from animals to patients with coronary artery disease and furthermore, suggest that resting pressure indices can be used to detect the haemodynamic significance of coronary artery stenoses.
Nijjer et al. (Fri,) reported a other. As stenosis worsens, hyperaemic flow decreases from 45 to 19 cm/s (Ptrend < 0.001), while resting flow remains stable due to reduced microvascular resistance.
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