Stroke, Vol 25, 2407-2411, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
T Yonehara, Y Ando, K Kimura, M Uchino and M Ando
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The aim of this study is to elucidate the effect of
orthostatic hypotension on changes in cerebral blood flow. METHODS: Blood
flow velocities of both the common carotid artery and vertebral artery were
measured using duplex ultrasonography in 12 patients: 6 with familial
amyloidotic polyneuropathy, 3 with Shy-Drager syndrome, 2 with
pandysautonomia, and 1 with senile orthostatic hypotension. Simultaneously,
peripheral blood flow was also evaluated by laser-Doppler flowmetry.
RESULTS: The patients showing dizziness or syncope when tilted to a 70
degrees upright position exhibited characteristic reverse flow at the
end-diastolic phase on the Doppler flow image of both the common carotid
and vertebral arteries, which was effectively treated by infusion of 2.5
micrograms/min norepinephrine for 10 minutes. This end-diastolic reverse
flow was not seen in any patients who did not have dizziness or syncope.
After subjects were tilted from a supine to a 70 degrees upright position,
decrease in the peripheral blood flow of the patients with orthostatic
hypotension remained unchanged for at least 5 minutes, whereas that of
control subjects was recovered within 2 minutes. However, no significant
difference between the patients with and without clinical symptoms was
observed. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that detection of this
specific echographic pattern may be quantitatively useful in examination of
clinical symptoms accompanying orthostatic hypotension and that duplex
ultrasonography may be a helpful tool to evaluate the effect of drugs used
for controlling these clinical signs.
ARTICLES
Detection of reverse flow by duplex ultrasonography in orthostatic hypotension
First Department of Internal Medicine, Kumamoto University School of Medicine, Japan.
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