Spectral analysis of arterial bruits (phonoangiography): experimental validation.
- 1 March 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 61 (3) , 515-520
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.61.3.515
Abstract
Turbulent flow in arteries produces sound recognized at the skin surface as a bruit. Spectral analysis of such bruits (phonoangiography) is the basis for a simple, noninvasive method of quantifying arterial stenosis. In human carotid stenoses, the spectral break frequency of the bruit (fo) (frequency beyond which bruit amplitude drops sharply) was directly related to the angiographic residual lumen diameter (d), i.e., d = U/fo, where U is flow velocity. In the clinical situation, flow velocity remains relatively constant because of cerebrovascular autoregulation. To test the effects of flow velocity on bruit frequency, stenosis anatomy, blood flow and the sounds originating from an abdominal aortic stenosis produced in adult mongrel dogs by external application of a 5-mm wide Teflon band were correlated under control conditions. Aortic flow was measured in arbitrary units with an electromagnetic flowmeter and varied by stepwise constriction of bilateral femoral arteriovenous fistulas. Bruits were recorded on tape and analyzed by computer. The relationship between flow through the stenosis and break frequency of the bruit was linear (r [correlation coefficient] = 0.89) in 10 dogs. Where d was altered in 3 dogs, the relationship between flow and break frequency remained linear for each different d. The relationship between break frequency, flow velocity and residual lumen diameter apparently holds over a wide range of values of each of those variables.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The bruit of carotid stenosis versus radiated basal heart murmurs. Differentiation by phonoangiography.Circulation, 1978
- Evaluation of Carotid Stenosis by PhonoangiographyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1975
- Phonoangiography: A New Noninvasive Diagnostic Method for Studying Arterial DiseaseProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1970