Variability in arterial diameter and compliance: compliance modulation reserve

Some antihypertensive drugs are known to increase arterial compliance in hypertensives; how far compliance can be increased is unknown. We studied eight mildly hypertensive patients to determine how far radial artery compliance can be acutely increased, i.e. the extent of the compliance modulation r...

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Published inJournal of hypertension. Supplement Vol. 10; no. 6; p. S41
Main Authors Trazzi, S, Omboni, S, Santucciu, C, Parati, G, Mancia, G
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 01.08.1992
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Summary:Some antihypertensive drugs are known to increase arterial compliance in hypertensives; how far compliance can be increased is unknown. We studied eight mildly hypertensive patients to determine how far radial artery compliance can be acutely increased, i.e. the extent of the compliance modulation reserve. We evaluated radial artery compliance by a new technique, assessing it throughout the cardiac cycle before and after the intra-arterial infusion of a vasodilator agent (papaverine). Before papaverine, compliance decreased progressively through diastolic to systolic blood pressure values. This was the case also during the papaverine infusion. However, over the full systolo-diastolic pressure range, compliance was increased by about 40% with papaverine. In hypertensive subjects radial artery compliance can be markedly increased on a acute basis, indicating that those antihypertensive drugs that improve compliance have a considerable reserve to act upon.
ISSN:0952-1178
DOI:10.1097/00004872-199208001-00011