Silva BBC, Procópio CCL, Atherton MC, Dario DM, Silva JFP, Rodrigues-Machado MG, Polese JC. Aortic pulse wave morphology in individuals after chronic stroke: interarm comparison wave morphology after chronic stroke.
Int J Neurosci 2025;
135:140-147. [PMID:
38060517 DOI:
10.1080/00207454.2023.2292946]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/28/2023] [Revised: 11/08/2023] [Accepted: 12/02/2023] [Indexed: 02/04/2025]
Abstract
CONTEXT
Vascular changes can be a risk factor for recurrent and new events of stroke. However, few information is known regarding the variables related to aortic pulse wave morphology in stroke individuals.
OBJECTIVE
To analyze aortic pulse wave morphology (arterial stiffness indices, hemodynamics and vascular variables) and to compare the paretic and non-paretic sides in individuals after chronic stroke.
DESIGN
In this cross-sectional study stroke individuals had arterial stiffness indices, hemodynamics and vascular variables assessed with brachial artery oscillometry. T-test (CI95%) was used in order to compare the variables between the paretic and non-paretic sides.
RESULTS
Twenty individuals were included, 65% men (60.3 SD 16.7 years). The following variables: (mean difference [CI95%]): coefficient of reflection (-2.33 [-4.60 to -0.07]), peak of ejection wave, P1 (5.32 [2.75 to 7.90] and peak of ejection wave, P2 (6.17 [2.55 to 9.78]), central diastolic blood pressure (mean difference [IC95%]): (-3.75 [-6.09 to -1.40]), central systolic blood pressure (-6.17 [-9.74 to -2.59]), mean arterial pressure (-4.46 [-7.08 to -1.84]), peripheral diastolic blood pressure (-3.48 [-5.94 to -1.02]) and peripheral systolic blood pressure (-5.53 [-9.54 to -1.52]) were higher in paretic than non-paretic side. Hemodynamics parameters were similar in both sides.
CONCLUSIONS
In this study we demonstrated, for the first time, that many parameters from aortic pulse wave were higher in paretic compared with non-paretic side in individuals after chronic stroke, suggesting that peripheral vascular changes affect heart-vascular coupling in these individuals.
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