Increasing pulse wavelength by 50% in a human arterial system model caused it to degenerate into a classical windkessel (r2 = 0.99), suggesting this mechanism underlies isolated systolic hypertension.
Does increasing pulse wavelength cause the systemic arterial system to degenerate into a classical windkessel?
Computational modeling demonstrates that age-related increases in pulse wavelength cause the arterial system to function as a classical windkessel, suggesting this mechanism underlies isolated systolic hypertension.
Estimación del efecto: r2 = 0.99
Two competing schools of thought ascribe vascular disease states such as isolated systolic hypertension to fundamentally different arterial system properties. The "windkessel school" describes the arterial system as a compliant chamber that distends and stores blood and relates pulse pressure to total peripheral resistance (R(tot)) and total arterial compliance (C(tot)). Inherent in this description is the assumption that arterial pulse wavelengths are infinite. The "transmission school," assuming a finite pulse wavelength, describes the arterial system as a network of vessels that transmits pulses and relates pulse pressure to the magnitude, timing, and sites of pulse-wave reflection. We hypothesized that the systemic arterial system, described by the transmission school, degenerates into a windkessel when pulse wavelengths increase sufficiently. Parameters affecting pulse wavelength (i.e., heart rate, arterial compliances, and radii) were systematically altered in a realistic, large-scale, human arterial system model, and the resulting pressures were compared with those assuming a classical (2-element) windkessel with the same R(tot) and C(tot). Increasing pulse wavelength as little as 50% (by changing heart rate -33.3%, compliances -55.5%, or radii +50%) caused the distributed arterial system model to degenerate into a classical windkessel (r(2) = 0.99). Model results were validated with analysis of representative human aortic pressure and flow waveforms. Because reported changes in arterial properties with age can markedly increase pulse wavelength, results suggest that isolated systolic hypertension is a manifestation of an arterial system that has degenerated into a windkessel, and thus arterial pressure is a function only of aortic flow, R(tot), and C(tot).
Mohiuddin et al. (Sat,) conducted a other in Isolated systolic hypertension. Increasing pulse wavelength (altering heart rate, compliances, radii) vs. Classical (2-element) windkessel model was evaluated on Degeneration into a classical windkessel (pressure comparison) (r2 = 0.99). Increasing pulse wavelength by 50% in a human arterial system model caused it to degenerate into a classical windkessel (r2 = 0.99), suggesting this mechanism underlies isolated systolic hypertension.