Abstract

Endothelium-dependent flow-mediated dilation (FMD) is measured as the increase in diameter of a conduit artery in response to reactive hyperemia, assessed either at a fixed time point [usually 60-s post-cuff deflation (FMD(60))] or as the maximal dilation during a 5-min continuous, ECG-gated, measurement (FMD(max-cont)). Preliminary evidence suggests that the time between reactive hyperemia and peak dilation (time to FMD(max)) may provide an additional index of endothelial health. We measured FMD(max-cont), FMD(60), and time to FMD(max) in 30 young healthy volunteers, 22 healthy middle-aged adults, 16 smokers, 23 patients with hypertension, 40 patients with coronary artery disease, and 22 patients with heart failure. As previously reported, FMD(max-cont) was similar in healthy cohorts and was significantly blunted in smokers and all patient groups, whereas FMD(60) was significantly blunted only in heart failure patients. There was a wide within-group variability between measures of time to FMD(max) with no significant difference between normal and patient groups. Intra-arterial infusion of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor N(omega)-monomethyl-l-arginine in eight healthy subjects resulted in a blunting of FMD(max-cont) (P < 0.001) and FMD(60) (P = 0.02) but not time to FMD(max). Both FMD(max-cont) and FMD(60) demonstrated good repeatability in 30 young healthy volunteers studied on two separate occasions (P < 0.01 for both), whereas time to FMD(max) varied widely between visits (P = not significant). In conclusion, although time to FMD(max) does not appear to be a useful adjunctive measure of endothelial health, the use of continuous diameter measurements provides important data in the study of endothelial function in healthy subjects and patients with cardiovascular disease.

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