Relation of phasic coronary flow velocity profile to clinical and hemodynamic characteristics of patients with aortic valve disease

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Abstract

Background. Our objective was to assess phasic coronary blood flow and velocity characteristics of the proximal portion of the left anterior descending artery and to evaluate their relation to the clinical and hemodynamic manifestations in patients with aortic valve disease. Methods and Results. We examined 26 patients with chronic aortic regurgitation (AR), 12 patients with predominant aortic stenosis (AS), and 11 control subjects using an intravascular Doppler catheter with spectral analysis. Angiographic assessment of AR identified 10 patients with mild regurgitation and 16 with severe regurgitation. The resting systolic coronary flow velocity-time integral (VTI) was significantly higher and the diastolic VTI was slightly but significantly higher in patients with severe regurgitation than in those with mild regurgitation (11.8±4.2 vs 4.1±1.1 cm, P

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Hongo, M., Goto, T., Watanabe, N., Nakatsuka, T., Tanaka, M., Kinoshita, O., … Sekiguchi, M. (1993). Relation of phasic coronary flow velocity profile to clinical and hemodynamic characteristics of patients with aortic valve disease. Circulation, 88(3), 953–960. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.88.3.953

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