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Attenuation of wave reflection by wave entrapment creates a "horizon effect" in the human aorta
Authors:Justin E Davies  Jordi Alastruey  Darrel P Francis  Nearchos Hadjiloizou  Zachary I Whinnett  Charlotte H Manisty  Jazmin Aguado-Sierra  Keith Willson  Rodney A Foale  Iqbal S Malik  Alun D Hughes  Kim H Parker  Jamil Mayet
Affiliation:International Centre for Circulatory Health, Imperial College, St Mary's Hospital Campus, 59-61 North Wharf Rd, Paddington, London W2 1LA, United Kingdom. justindavies@heart123.com.
Abstract:Wave reflection is thought to be important in the augmentation of blood pressure. However, identification of distal reflections sites remains unclear. One possible explanation for this is that wave reflection is predominately determined by an amalgamation of multiple proximal small reflections rather than large discrete reflections originating from the distal peripheries. In 19 subjects (age, 35-73 years), sensor-tipped intra-arterial wires were used to measure pressure and Doppler velocity at 10-cm intervals along the aorta, starting at the aortic root. Incident and reflected waves were identified and timings and magnitudes quantified using wave intensity analysis. Mean wave speed increased along the length of the aorta (proximal, 6.8±0.9 m/s; distal, 10.7±1.5 m/s). The incident wave was tracked moving along the aorta, taking 55±4 ms to travel from the aortic root to the distal aorta. However, the timing to the refection site distance did not differ between proximal and distal aortic measurement sites (proximal aorta, 48±5 ms versus distal aorta, 42±4 ms; P=0.3). We performed a second analysis using aortic waveforms in a nonlinear model of pulse-wave propagation. This demonstrated very similar results to those observed in vivo and also an exponential attenuation in reflection magnitude. There is no single dominant refection site in or near the distal aorta. Rather, there are multiple reflection sites along the aorta, for which the contributions are attenuated with distance. We hypothesize that rereflection of reflected waves leads to wave entrapment, preventing distal waves being seen in the proximal aorta.
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