Quantitative pulsed Doppler measurement of common femoral artery blood flow variables during postocclusive reactive hyperemia
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Clinical Ultrasound
- Vol. 14 (3) , 165-170
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcu.1870140302
Abstract
Quantitative blood flow measurements were performed on 37 normal lower limbs with a 128‐channel digital pulsed Doppler (MDPD) system. The evolution of mean flow (QM), peak systolic flow (QS), diastolic flow (QD), and prograde stroke volume (PSV) was observed at rest, during postocclusive reactive hyperemia (PORH), and at 1‐, 2‐, and 3‐min intervals. The QM at rest was 2.9 ± 1.1 ml/s; PORH induced a four‐to fivefold increase in QM and PSV secondary to a slight increase in QS and the disappearance of the reverse protodiastolic component of resting flow. Reverse flow was restored after 1 min. Both QS and QD returned to resting values after 2 min, whereas QM remained significantly higher after 3 min. To provide a better description of the hyperemic response, we also studied the evolution of the pulsatility index as applied the flow curve (PIQ). Similarly, the systolic amplitude index (SAI) is presented. Our study demonstrates that pulsed Doppler techniques can be used for noninvasive quantitative assessment of blood flow at rest and during PORH. The values obtained on normal subjects provide base‐line data for further investigation of pathological conditions.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Femoral Blood Flow Determination with a Multichannel Digital Pulsed Doppler: An Experimental Study on Anesthetized DogsVascular Surgery, 1983
- Pulsed doppler assessment of normal human femoral artery velocity patternsJournal of Surgical Research, 1979
- Transcutaneous measurement of femoral artery flowJournal of Surgical Research, 1971
- Haemodynamic studies in peripheral arterial diseaseBritish Journal of Surgery, 1970
- THE DIRECT MEASUREMENT OF FEMORAL BLOOD FLOW IN MANThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1964
- Femoral Artery Flow, Limb Blood Volume and Cardiac Output Through Continuously Recorded Indicator-Dilution CurvesAnnals of Surgery, 1963