Circulation, Vol 77, 988-996, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
SA Carter, E Dean and EA Kroeger
Despite considerable research, the mechanisms responsible for the vasospasm
associated with Raynaud's syndrome are not well understood and there is no
reliable diagnostic test. In the present studies, measurements of systolic
pressure in locally cooled fingers were used to address these issues. We
found that local cooling produced a marked decrease or loss of the apparent
finger systolic pressure in patients with Raynaud's syndrome in whom a
standardized vasoconstriction had been induced by body cooling. Abnormal
responses were encountered in 109 of 125 patients with secondary Raynaud's
syndrome, in 21 of 37 patients with primary Raynaud's disease or the
syndrome of uncertain cause, and in two of 63 subjects without symptoms of
Raynaud's. These data suggest a high accuracy of the test in patients with
secondary Raynaud's syndrome and lower accuracy in those with disease of
primary or uncertain cause. We studied responses of systolic pressures to
alterations in body and local temperatures in fingers with and without low
pressures secondary to proximal arterial obstruction. Our data show that
although local cooling has a small independent effect that increases
vascular tone: (1) sympathetic vasoconstriction induced by body cooling is
necessary to produce vasospasm and often produces it without local cooling,
(2) high local temperature (30 degrees C) protects from vasospasm, and (3)
low finger blood pressure predisposes to it. Delayed opening of the vessels
observed after sudden deflation of blood pressure cuffs suggests that
abnormal responses of finger systolic pressure to cold represent combined
effects of high vascular tone, delayed opening, and local blood
pressure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Apparent finger systolic pressures during cooling in patients with Raynaud's syndrome
Department of Physiology, University of Manitoba, Canada.
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