Author:
Hollander Ellen H.,Dobson Gary M.,Wang Jiun-Jr,Parker Kim H.,Tyberg John V.
Abstract
Pressure waves are thought to travel from the left atrium (LA) to the pulmonary artery (PA) only retrogradely, via the vasculature. In seven anesthetized open-chest dogs, a balloon was placed in the LA, which was rapidly inflated and deflated during diastole, early systole, and late systole. High-fidelity pressures were measured within and around the heart. Measurements were made at low volume [LoV; left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) = 5–9 mmHg], high volume (HiV; LVEDP = 16–19 mmHg), and HiV with the pericardium removed. Wave-intensity analysis demonstrated that, except during late systole, balloon inflation created forward-going PA compression waves that were transmitted directly through the heart without measurable delay; backward PA compression waves were transmitted in-series through the pulmonary vasculature and arrived after delays of 90 ± 3 ms (HiV) and 103 ± 5 ms (LoV; P < 0.05). Direct transmission was greater during diastole, and both direct and series transmission increased with volume loading. Pressure waves from the LA arrive in the PA by two distinct routes: rapidly and directly through the heart and delayed and in-series through the pulmonary vasculature.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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