Abstract-Arterial elasticity is determined by structural characteristics of the artery wall and by vascular smooth muscle tone. The identity of endogenous vasoactive substances that regulate elasticity has not been defined in humans. We hypothesized that NO, a vasodilator released constitutively by the endothelium, augments arterial elasticity. Seven healthy young men were studied. A 20-MHz intravascular ultrasound catheter was introduced through an arterial sheath to measure brachial artery cross-sectional area, wall thickness, and intra-arterial pressure. After control was established, indices of elasticity (pressure-area relationship, instantaneous compliance, and stress-strain, pressure-incremental elastic modulus (E inc ), and pressure-pulse wave velocity relationships) were examined over 0 to 100 mm Hg transmural pressure obtained by inflation of an external cuff. Thereafter, the basal production of endothelium-derived NO was inhibited by N G -monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) (4 and 8 mg/min). Finally, nitroglycerin (2.5 and 12.5 g/min), an exogenous donor of NO, was given to relax the vascular smooth muscle. Elasticity was measured under all of these conditions. L-NMMA (8 mg/min) decreased brachial artery area (Pϭ0.016) and compliance (PϽ0.0001) and increased E inc (PϽ0.01) and pulse wave velocity (PϽ0.0001). Nitroglycerin (12.5 g/min) increased brachial artery area (PϽ0.001) and compliance (PϽ0.001) and decreased pulse wave velocity (Pϭ0.02). NO, an endothelium-derived vasodilator, augments arterial elasticity in the human brachial artery. Loss of constitutively released NO associated with cardiovascular risk factors may adversely affect arterial elasticity in humans. Key Words: brachial artery Ⅲ elasticity Ⅲ human Ⅲ endothelium-derived relaxing factor E lasticity of large arteries absorbs the energy of the phasic stroke volume in systole and thereby dampens the arterial pressure wave during its propagation through the arterial tree. 1 The release of stored energy in diastole facilitates the continuous flow of blood to tissues. 2 Several indices of arterial elasticity have been used in clinical studies, including compliance, distensibility index, stress-strain relationships, Young's modulus, and pulse wave velocity. Arterial compliance refers to the relationship between arterial dimension and the distending pressure. An increase in compliance corresponds to a decrease in artery stiffness. Arterial compliance changes in a nonlinear fashion with blood pressure. It tends to be greater at lower blood pressures, and for this reason the distensibility index (change in volume/change in pressureϫbaseline volume) can lead to erroneous conclusions if the mean distending pressure is shifted by an intervention. Compliance curves and the incremental modulus (E inc ) can be used to assess elasticity independent of the blood pressure changes. Recently, a technique to assess arterial elasticity in humans with the use of intravascular ultrasound to measure arterial dimension and inflation of an external blood pressure cuff...
Abstract-Oxidation of LDLs plays an important role in atherosclerosis, and immune response to oxidized LDL (oxLDL) may modulate atherogenesis. Although immunization with oxLDL is shown to suppress atherogenesis in animal models, the role of the immune response to oxLDL is not well established in humans. We investigated the relationship between the titer of anti-oxLDL antibody (oxLDL Ab) and arterial wall thickness in a healthy population with no clinical signs of atherosclerosis. Intima-media thickness of the carotid arteries (CA-IMT) was measured by high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography in 446 healthy subjects. The titer of IgG-class oxLDL Ab was measured by a solid-phase ELISA. In univariate analysis, CA-IMT correlated positively with age, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, triglyceride, LDL cholesterol, body mass index, and waist-to-hip ratio, whereas it correlated negatively with HDL cholesterol and oxLDL Ab titer. The inverse association between oxLDL Ab titer and CA-IMT remained significant in multiple regression analysis, which took other confounding variables into account. These results indicate an independent inverse relationship between oxLDL Ab titer and CA-IMT in healthy subjects, supporting the hypothesis that immune response to oxLDL may have a protective role at an early stage of human atherosclerosis.
BackgroundIn order to control malaria, it is important to understand the genetic structure of the parasites in each endemic area. Plasmodium vivax is widely distributed in the tropical to temperate regions of Asia and South America, but effective strategies for its elimination have yet to be designed. In South Korea, for example, indigenous vivax malaria was eliminated by the late 1970s, but re-emerged from 1993. We estimated the population structure and temporal dynamics of transmission of P. vivax in South Korea using microsatellite DNA markers.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe analyzed 255 South Korean P. vivax isolates collected from 1994 to 2008, based on 10 highly polymorphic microsatellite DNA loci of the P. vivax genome. Allelic data were obtained for the 87 isolates and their microsatellite haplotypes were determined based on a combination of allelic data of the loci. In total, 40 haplotypes were observed. There were two predominant haplotypes: H16 and H25. H16 was observed in 9 isolates (10%) from 1996 to 2005, and H25 in 27 (31%) from 1995 to 2003. These results suggested that the recombination rate of P. vivax in South Korea, a temperate country, was lower than in tropical areas where identical haplotypes were rarely seen in the following year. Next, we estimated the relationships among the 40 haplotypes by eBURST analysis. Two major groups were found: one composed of 36 isolates (41%) including H25; the other of 20 isolates (23%) including H16. Despite the low recombination rate, other new haplotypes that are genetically distinct from the 2 groups have also been observed since 1997 (H27).Conclusions/SignificanceThese results suggested a continual introduction of P. vivax from other population sources, probably North Korea. Molecular epidemiology using microsatellite DNA of the P. vivax population is effective for assessing the population structure and transmission dynamics of the parasites - information that can assist in the elimination of vivax malaria in endemic areas.
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