Literature DB >> 28032358

Evaluation of the brachial artery endothelial function in chronic alcohol consumption among males by high-frequency ultrasonography.

Runlan Luo1, Jiaqi Shen1, Qiao Zhou1, Yue Liu1, Guangsen Li1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: There is evidence suggesting that different volumes of chronic alcohol consumption have different effects on the endothelium. Therefore, using high-frequency ultrasonography, we evaluate the effects of the different volume and duration of alcohol intake on brachial artery endothelial function in chronic drinkers.
METHODS: Ninety-two male chronic episodic alcoholics were grouped by alcohol intake amount and duration: mild (group B, n=30); ≤90 mg ethanol daily, 3-5 days/wk for 5-8 years; moderate (group C, n=30); 90-150 mg ethanol daily, 3-5 days/wk for 9-20 years; and severe (group D, n=32); ≥150 mg ethanol daily, 6-7 days/wk for more than 10 years. Thirty male nondrinkers were recruited as the control group A. High-frequency ultrasonography was used to measure brachial artery diameter during rest, during reactive hyperemia and following the administration of nitroglycerin. Endothelial-dependent brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) and endothelial-independent brachial artery nitrate-mediated dilatation (NMD) were calculated.
RESULTS: Flow-mediated dilatation values for group C and D were significantly lower than those for group A and B (VC =7.63±0.22, VD =5.85±0.23 vs VA =13.35±0.35, VB =12.81±0.36, P<.01). The FMD of group D was significantly lower than that of group C (P<.01). Meanwhile, the NMD of group D was significantly lower than that of the other groups (VD =17.33±6.21 vs VA =25.35±7.42, VB =24.52±8.30, VC =23.35±7.27, P<.01).
CONCLUSIONS: Chronic moderate-to-heavy alcohol consumption caused endothelial dysfunction, even damaging vascular smooth muscle cells in cases of heavy alcohol consumption, while abstinence and chronic mild alcoholics caused no effect on endothelial function.
© 2016, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  alcohol; endothelial dysfunction; flow-mediated dilatation; high-frequency ultrasonography; nitrate-mediated dilatation

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 28032358     DOI: 10.1111/echo.13432

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Echocardiography        ISSN: 0742-2822            Impact factor:   1.724


  4 in total

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