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Journal ArticleDOI

Noninvasive vascular ultrasound: an asset in vascular medicine.

Robert S. Reneman, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
- Vol. 45, Iss: 1, pp 27-35
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TLDR
An ultrasound system to assess diameter, blood flow velocity and volume flow in the brachial artery in man and the results showed that the diameter as assessed with the system compared favorably with the diameter of the tubing in an in vitro set-up.
Abstract
### 1.1 Introduction There are always moments in life, inviting to look back on the past. Entering the next millennium is certainly such an occasion, because it happens generally only once in a life-time. Therefore, we very much liked the idea of the Editors to publish a special issue of Cardiovascular Research on the occasion of this event and to explore the impact of the articles in the journal most frequently cited over the years on further developments in the field. We gladly accepted their invitation to evaluate in this respect the article by Levenson et al. published in Cardiovascular Research in 1981 [1]. ### 1.2 Content of the article In this article the authors described an ultrasound system to assess diameter, blood flow velocity and volume flow in the brachial artery in man. The apparatus consisted of an adjustable range-gated pulsed Doppler system, emitter frequency 8 MHz, combined with a double transducer system to accurately determine the angle between ultrasound beam and vessel axis. The latter is a prerequisite for accurate determination of both the velocity in and the diameter of the artery and, hence, for proper calculation of volume flow. The length of the sample volume could be adjusted by varying the length of the reception duration. A small sample volume was used to measure velocity locally in the artery and to determine the diameter of the vessel accurately and a large one to estimate the average velocity over the cross-sectional area of the vessel. A static high-pass filter with a lower cut-off frequency of 250 Hz was used to reduce interference of high amplitude low frequency signals reflected by the arterial walls. The validity of the system was tested in an in vitro set-up and the results showed that the diameter as assessed with the system compared favorably with the diameter of the tubing in …

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Citations
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Increases in central fat mass and decreases in peripheral fat mass are associated with accelerated arterial stiffening in healthy adults: the Amsterdam Growth and Health Longitudinal Study

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In patients with pseudoxanthoma elasticum a thicker and more elastic carotid artery is associated with elastin fragmentation and proteoglycans accumulation.

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Systemic dilation diathesis in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms: a role for matrix metalloproteinase-9?

TL;DR: The data support the idea that AAA patients exhibit a systemic dilation diathesis, which might be attributable to MMP/TIMP imbalances, which is associated with decreased distensibility and compliance of the suprarenal aorta.
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A Virtual Instrument for Automated Measurement of Arterial Compliance

TL;DR: A simple instrument for noninvasive in vivo evaluation of arterial compliance using a single element ultrasound transducer that can measure arterial distension with a precision better than 5 and the end-diastolic arterial diameter with an accuracy of 1%.
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Differentiation of mild and severe stenosis with motion estimation in ultrasound images.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intimal plus medial thickness of the arterial wall: a direct measurement with ultrasound imaging.

TL;DR: No significant difference was found between B mode-determined intimal + medial thickness in the common carotid arteries evaluated in vitro and that determined by this method in vivo in young subjects, indicating that B mode imaging represents a useful approach for the measurement of intimal - medial thickness of human arteries in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flow effects on prostacyclin production by cultured human endothelial cells.

TL;DR: The steady-state production rate of cells subjected to pulsatile shear stress was more than twice that of cells exposed to steadyShear stress and 16 times greater than that of Cells in stationary culture.
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Ultrasonographically assessed carotid morphology and the risk of coronary heart disease.

TL;DR: The association of the high-resolution ultrasound assessment of extracranial carotid morphology with the risk of acute coronary events in 1,288 eastern Finnish men was associated with a 3.29-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.31-8.29) risk of severe myocardial infarction compared with men free of any structural changes in the carOTid artery wall at baseline.

The heart and cardiovascular system

TL;DR: This book contains 72 chapters that discuss Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Radionuclide Methods to Assess Cardiac Function, Perfusion Viability and Necrosis, NMR Imaging of the Cardiovascular System, Quantitative Angiographic Techniques, RNA Transcription in Heart Muscle, and Reentry Rhythms.
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