Correlation of Flicker-Induced and Flow-Mediated Vasodilatation in Patients With Endothelial Dysfunction and Healthy Volunteers
Adult
Male
Brachial Artery
Light
Retinal Artery
Systole
Hypercholesterolemia
Middle Aged
Retinal Vein
Flicker Fusion
Vasodilation
03 medical and health sciences
Cholesterol
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
0302 clinical medicine
Reference Values
Hypertension
Humans
Female
Endothelium, Vascular
Blood Flow Velocity
Original Research
DOI:
10.2337/dc08-2130
Publication Date:
2009-05-29T01:51:33Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE
Flicker-induced vasodilatation is reduced in patients with vascular-related diseases, which has at least partially been attributed to endothelial dysfunction of retinal vessels. Currently, the standard method to assess endothelial function in vivo is flow-mediated vasodilatation (FMD). Thus, the present study was performed to investigate whether a correlation exists between flicker-induced vasodilatation and FMD in patients with known endothelial dysfunction and healthy subjects.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
In the present study, 20 patients with type 1 diabetes, 40 patients with systemic hypertension (systolic blood pressure 140–159 mmHg; diastolic blood pressure 90–99 mmHg) and/or serum cholesterol levels ≥0.65 mmol/l, and 20 healthy control subjects were included. The flicker response was measured using the Dynamic Retinal Vessel Analyzer. FMD was determined using a high-resolution ultrasound system, measuring brachial artery diameter reactivity during reperfusion after arterial occlusion.
RESULTS
The flicker response of both retinal arteries and veins was significantly reduced in the two patients groups. Likewise, FMD was significantly reduced in patients compared with healthy control subjects. However, only a weak correlation between flicker-induced vasodilatation and FMD was observed.
CONCLUSIONS
The study confirms that flicker responses and FMD are reduced in the selected patient groups. Whether the weak correlation between FMD and flicker is due to the different stimulation type, the different vascular beds measured, or other mechanisms has yet to be investigated.
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