Blood Velocity Profiles in the Human Renal Artery by Doppler Ultrasound and Their Relationship to Atherosclerosis

Blood velocity profiles were measured in the renal branch (diameter 5.9 plus/minus 1.3 mm) of the aortorenal bifurcation using a 20-MHz 80-channel pulsed Doppler velocimeter during retroperitoneal surgery in 10 patients. The peak Reynolds number was 1145 plus/minus 140 and the frequency parameter (W...

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Veröffentlicht in:Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology thrombosis, and vascular biology, 1996-01, Vol.16 (1), p.172-177
Hauptverfasser: Yamamoto, Tokunori, Ogasawara, Yasuo, Kimura, Akihiro, Tanaka, Hiroyoshi, Hiramatsu, Osamu, Tsujioka, Katsuhiko, Lever, M. John, Parker, Kim H, Jones, Christopher J.H, Caro, Colin G, Kajiya, Fumihiko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Blood velocity profiles were measured in the renal branch (diameter 5.9 plus/minus 1.3 mm) of the aortorenal bifurcation using a 20-MHz 80-channel pulsed Doppler velocimeter during retroperitoneal surgery in 10 patients. The peak Reynolds number was 1145 plus/minus 140 and the frequency parameter (Wormersley parameter) was 3.0 plus/minus 0.8. Immediately distal to the ostium of the renal artery, reverse flow, indicating flow separation, was observed near the cranial wall mainly during the first part of the cardiac cycle. There were flows from the cranial to the caudal side of the artery at this location, indicating the presence of strong secondary flows. Two diameters downstream of the ostium, the velocity profiles were skewed to the caudal side in all patients. Four diameters downstream, the flow profile was symmetrical (3 patients) or only slightly skewed (7 patients) and virtually parabolic throughout the cardiac cycle. These observations mean that the flow on the cranial side of the renal branch of the human aortorenal bifurcation is characterized by (1) a bidirectional oscillation of the flow, (2) separation of the flow during systole, and (3) low time-averaged shear rate. These blood velocity patterns may be related to the localization and development of atheromatous plaque that occurs preferentially in this region of the renal artery. Conversely, the unidirectional, axisymmetrical flow found in more distal parts of the renal artery are associated with a very low incidence of lesions. (Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 1996;16172-177.)
ISSN:1079-5642
1524-4636
DOI:10.1161/01.ATV.16.1.172