Validation of a new method for non-invasive assessment of vasomotor function
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology

Abstract
Reactive hyperaemia induces a slowing of pulse wave velocity (PWV) in conduit arteries of healthy subjects (flow-mediated slowing (FMS)). This could be an alternative method for assessing peripheral vasomotor function to the gold standard method of flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) a more expensive and technically demanding technique. We aimed to assess the reproducibility of FMS in healthy participants and to test its ability to detect differences in vasomotor function in patients with familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) and post-lipoprotein apheresis (LA) treatment.
Altogether 25 healthy participants were studied on two occasions to assess reproducibility of FMS. In a case control study of 22 patients with FH and matched healthy controls, FMD and FMS were compared. An intervention study in 12 patients with FH looked at the impact of a single LA treatment on FMS assessed pre and post treatment.
FMS demonstrated good reproducibility (coefficient of variation (CoV) 7.3%). Patients with FH had reduced FMS in comparison to matched healthy controls (FMS% FH −15.13 ± 5.04% vs controls −18.41 ± 5.15%,
FMS is a reproducible technique, which is able to detect differences in vasomotor function both in a condition associated with endothelial dysfunction and following an acute intervention known to improve endothelial function. This simple technique has potential for accessible assessment of vasomotor function in clinical studies.
Contributors

Elizabeth A Ellins
Author

Karl J New
Author

Dev BN Datta
Author

Suzanne Watkins
Author

Kate Haralambos
Author

Alan Rees
Author

D Aled Rees
Author

Julian PJ Halcox
Author
Swansea University Swansea , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
