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Clinical Research

Clinical Research Papers

A New Technique to Evaluate Arterial Compliance Changes During Pregnancy

TJ Brinton, SS Chio, ED Walls, D Cunningham, and EB Grossman. Pulse Metric, Inc., San Diego, CA USA and University of Rochester, Rochester, NY USA.

Objective: The development of a new technique to evaluate arterial compliance (ArtC) changes during the course of pregnancy.

Methodology: We previously developed and validated a non-invasive method to evaluate blood pressure (BP) and brachial artery compliance (ArtC) using a cuff sphygmomanometer. (Brinton et al, Amer J Cardiol, 1997). To evaluate potential changes in BP and ArtC during pregnancy, 15 pregnant women underwent study at 14, 24, 28, 32, and 36 weeks using the new method in an ambulatory device. Each 24 hour ambulatory monitoring session consisted of 30-40 determinations of BP and ArtC. Average BP and ArtC were determined for each 24 hour monitoring session.

Results: ArtC decreased significantly at 28 weeks and remained low thereafter. SBP was significantly increased at 36 weeks, though a trend toward an increase at 28 weeks appeared to correlate with the decrease in ArtC. DBP did not change.

Week

14

24

28

32

36

SBP

122± 3

122± 3

126± 3

125± 3

130± 3*

DBP

66± 2

65<± 2

66± 3

65± 1

70± 2

ArtC

0.112± 0.005

0.110± 0.005

0.099± 0.005*

0.102± 0.005*

0.099± 0.005*

Values are Mean± SEM, * p < 0.05 vs. 14 wk

Conclusions: ArtC decreases in the middle of pregnancy, and the changes proceed or possibly coincide with, the increase in SBP. The results demonstrate the feasibility of using this non-invasive ambulatory technique for monitoring ArtC during pregnancy and therefore should be useful in studying potential ArtC alterations during preeclampsia.