Abnormal wall shear conditions in the brachial artery of hypertensive patients

J Hypertens. 1990 Feb;8(2):109-14. doi: 10.1097/00004872-199002000-00003.

Abstract

Brachial artery wall shear phenomena were studied in 20 untreated essential hypertensive patients and in 11 normotensive controls of similar age. A pulsed-Doppler velocimeter was used to measure brachial artery internal diameter and mean cross-sectional and systolic centreline blood velocities. A coaxial-cylinder viscometer was used to measure blood viscosity at a shear rate of 96 s-1. A Poiseuille model of velocity distribution across the arterial lumen was used to determine wall shear rate and stress from, respectively, the ratio of blood velocity to arterial diameter and the product of shear rate and blood viscosity. Mean and systolic shear rates and stresses were calculated using, respectively, mean cross-sectional and systolic centreline blood velocities. Hypertensive patients had larger brachial artery diameters (P less than 0.001), lower systolic centreline and mean cross-sectional blood velocities (P less than 0.001, P less than 0.05), higher blood viscosity (P less than 0.001), lower mean and systolic wall shear rates (P less than 0.01, P less than 0.001) and lower systolic wall shear stress (P less than 0.05) than normotensive controls. In all subjects, mean blood pressure was negatively correlated both with mean and systolic shear rates (r = -0.38, P less than 0.05;r = -0.45, P less than 0.01). Thus the hypertensive state was associated with decreases in both mean and systolic wall shear rates, and in systolic wall shear stress. These shear abnormalities merit attention because of the atherogenic effect of low-shear conditions.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Blood Flow Velocity / physiology
  • Blood Pressure
  • Blood Viscosity
  • Brachial Artery / pathology
  • Brachial Artery / physiopathology*
  • Echocardiography, Doppler / methods
  • Humans
  • Hypertension / pathology
  • Hypertension / physiopathology*
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Systole