Radial tonometry is a highly reproducible technique for measuring central waveform indices during exercise, yielding intraclass correlations of 0.89 to 0.93 (P<0.001) at 50% exercise intensity.
Observational (n=28)
Is radial tonometry a reproducible technique for measuring central blood pressure and waveform indices during exercise-induced hemodynamic perturbations in healthy subjects?
Radial tonometry is a highly reproducible method for measuring central blood pressure and waveform indices during exercise-induced hemodynamic changes.
Effect estimate: ICC 0.89-0.93
p-value: p=<0.001
BACKGROUND: Central blood pressure (BP) and markers of wave reflection (augmentation index; AIx) measured by radial tonometry have prognostic value independent from brachial BP. The measurement of the central waveform is increasingly used during altered hemodynamics, including exercise, but reliability of the test has not been reported under changed loading conditions. This study aimed to test the technique's reproducibility during major hemodynamic perturbations induced by exercise. METHODS: Radial waveforms were recorded (SphygmoCor) in 28 healthy subjects (aged 53 +/- 11 years) at rest, during submaximal exercise (cycling at 50, 60, and 70% of maximal age-predicted heart rate (HR)) and immediately after maximal treadmill exercise on two occasions separated by 9 +/- 5 days. Data were compared between testing days. Waveforms were calibrated with brachial BP measured using a mercury sphygmomanometer. Pulse pressure amplification (PPAmp) was defined as the ratio of brachial to central pulse pressure. RESULTS: There was very good reproducibility between visits at all exercise intensities for all waveform measures, including AIx, central pulse pressure, and PPAmp (intraclass correlations at 50% exercise were 0.93, 0.89, and 0.89, respectively; P 0.05 for all). CONCLUSIONS: Radial tonometry is a reproducible technique for measurement of central waveform indices during perturbations induced by exercise. It should, therefore, be suitable for use in intervention studies in which hemodynamics are altered.
Holland et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Healthy subjects (n=28). Radial tonometry (SphygmoCor) vs. Repeated testing (two occasions) was evaluated on Reproducibility of waveform measures (AIx, central pulse pressure, and PPAmp) between visits (ICC 0.89-0.93, p=<0.001). Radial tonometry is a highly reproducible technique for measuring central waveform indices during exercise, yielding intraclass correlations of 0.89 to 0.93 (P<0.001) at 50% exercise intensity.
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