Literature DB >> 7977821

Measurement of aortic input impedance in rats.

G F Mitchell1, M A Pfeffer, N Westerhof, J M Pfeffer.   

Abstract

Measurement of aortic input impedance in the rat is complicated by a high basal heart rate but is possible if appropriate compensation is made for frequency-dependent errors in modulus and phase resulting from analog filters in the equipment and from nonalignment of pressure and flow sensors. Because input impedance is a complex quantity, accurate values for both phase and modulus are required before meaningful interpretation of the data can be made. We measured aortic pressure and electromagnetic ascending aortic blood flow in mature, ether-anesthetized, open-chest male Wistar rats. Pressure and flow waveforms were averaged in the time domain and converted to Fourier series. Flow moduli were corrected for the measured frequency response of the flowmeter. Phase spectra were corrected by the classic frequency-domain and two new time-domain methods. Compensation for instrumentation errors was assessed at two different flowmeter filter settings in five animals. Reproducibility, variability, and the effects of vasoconstriction were assessed in 43 animals. Three methods of estimating characteristic impedance from the impedance spectra were evaluated and found to produce comparable results at baseline and following pharmacological elevation of blood pressure with graded methoxamine infusion. Physiologically equivalent values for phase, as assessed by comparing oscillatory power calculated from the impedance spectra, were obtained with each of the phase-correction techniques. The new time-domain methods facilitate the assessment of aortic input impedance in this small animal model because they do not require measurement of the spatial separation between pressure and flow transducers and pulse wave velocity in the proximal aorta.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7977821     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.1994.267.5.H1907

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  19 in total

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4.  Effects of a new advanced glycation inhibitor, LR-90, on mitigating arterial stiffening and improving arterial elasticity and compliance in a diabetic rat model: aortic impedance analysis.

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5.  Persistent vascular collagen accumulation alters hemodynamic recovery from chronic hypoxia.

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8.  Aminoguanidine prevents age-related aortic stiffening in Fisher 344 rats: aortic impedance analysis.

Authors:  Kuo-Chu Chang; Kwan-Lih Hsu; Ying-I Peng; Fong-Chu Lee; Yung-Zu Tseng
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9.  Aminoguanidine prevents arterial stiffening and cardiac hypertrophy in streptozotocin-induced diabetes in rats.

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10.  Prevention of arterial stiffening by pyridoxamine in diabetes is associated with inhibition of the pathogenic glycation on aortic collagen.

Authors:  Kuo-Chu Chang; Jin-Tung Liang; Pei-Shan Tsai; Ming-Shiou Wu; Kwan-Lih Hsu
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 8.739

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