Circulation, Vol 73, 1264-1269, Copyright © 1986 by American Heart Association
H Smulyan, S Mookherjee and RA Warner
Nitroglycerin acts, in part, to reduce arterial impedance, and thus left
ventricular work. The reduction in arterial impedance is largely
attributable to a fall in systemic vascular resistance, but may also be due
to an increased distensibility of the arterial tree. In this study, volume
distensibility of forearm arteries was calculated from measurements of
pulse-wave velocity before and during intravenous nitroglycerin infusion.
Since a fall in blood pressure itself increases arterial distensibility,
the induced blood pressure change was controlled as a variable by repeating
the measurements with the subject's forearm in a plastic cylinder and
repeating the measurements at a variety of altered cylinder pressures. At
every studied pressure, nitroglycerin infusion increased forearm arterial
distensibility, demonstrating another way in which nitroglycerin reduces
left ventricular afterload. Since the pulsatile portion of cardiac work is
approximately 10% of total work, the magnitude of this nitroglycerin effect
on cardiac function is probably small.
ARTICLES
The effect of nitroglycerin on forearm arterial distensibility
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