articleCirculationJun 24, 2003Closed access

Novel Index for Invasively Assessing the Coronary Microcirculation

Stanford University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

A relatively simple, invasive method for quantitatively assessing the status of the coronary microcirculation independent of the epicardial artery is lacking. METHODS AND RESULTS: By using a coronary pressure wire and modified software, it is possible to calculate the mean transit time of room-temperature saline injected down a coronary artery. The inverse of the hyperemic mean transit time has been shown to correlate with absolute flow. We hypothesize that distal coronary pressure divided by the inverse of the hyperemic mean transit time provides an index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR) that will correlate with true microcirculatory resistance (TMR), defined as the distal left anterior descending (LAD) pressure divided by hyperemic flow, measured with an external ultrasonic flow probe. A total of 61 measurements were made in 9 Yorkshire swine at baseline and after disruption of the coronary microcirculation, both with and without an epicardial LAD stenosis. The mean IMR (16.9+/-6.5 U to 25.9+/-14.4 U, P=0.002) and TMR (0.51+/-0.14 to 0.79+/-0.32 mm Hg x mL(-1) x min(-1), P=0.0001), as well as the % change in IMR (147+/-66%) and TMR (159+/-105%, P=NS versus IMR % change), increased significantly and to a similar degree after disruption of the microcirculation. These changes were independent of the status of the epicardial artery. There was a significant correlation between mean IMR and TMR values, as well as between the % change in IMR and % change in TMR.

Conclusions

Measuring IMR may provide a simple, quantitative, invasive assessment of the coronary microcirculation.

Citation impact

661
total citations
FWCI
4.00
Percentile
100%
References
14
Citations per year

Authors

7

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Microcirculation
  • Cardiology
  • Internal medicine
  • Blood flow
  • Artery
  • Fractional flow reserve
  • Coronary flow reserve
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