Association Between Intima-Media Thickness and Wall Shear Stress in Common Carotid Arteries in Healthy Male Subjects

Author:

Gnasso Agostino1,Carallo Claudio1,Irace Concetta1,Spagnuolo Vitaliano1,De Novara Giuseppina1,Mattioli Pier Luigi1,Pujia Arturo1

Affiliation:

1. the University of Reggio Calabria, Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Clinica, Centro Aterosclerosi, Catanzaro, Italy.

Abstract

Background Atherosclerotic lesions lie in regions of low wall shear stress. No relationship between wall shear stress and intima-media thickness in vivo has been reported. Aims of the present study were to verify the reproducibility of wall shear stress measurement in vivo and to evaluate its association with intima-media thickness in the common carotid artery in healthy subjects. Methods and Results Wall shear stress was calculated according to the following formula: Shear Stress=Blood Viscosity×Blood Velocity/Internal Diameter. Blood viscosity was measured by use of a cone/plate viscometer. Blood velocity, internal diameter, and intima-media thickness were measured by high-resolution echo Doppler. Twenty-one healthy male subjects were investigated. Peak and mean shear stress values were 29.5±8.2 and 12.1±3.1 dynes/cm −2 (mean±SD), respectively. Peak shear stress was inversely related to intima-media thickness ( r =.62), age ( r =.77), systolic blood pressure ( r =.61), and body mass index ( r =.59) ( P <.0001 for all coefficients). Mean shear stress yielded similar results. The relationship between shear stress and intima-media thickness was independent of age, blood pressure, and body mass index. The reproducibility, calculated by Kendall's W test, was statistically significant. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that common carotid artery wall shear stress measurement in vivo is reproducible. It inversely relates to intima-media thickness, age, systolic blood pressure, and body mass index. These findings confirm in vivo the role of shear stress in intima-media thickening.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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