Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5948920 Atherosclerosis 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveThe radial artery wall structure can be measured with non-invasive very high-resolution ultrasound with great feasibility and high accuracy. In the present study, we aim to explore clinical correlates of radial artery intima-media thickness (rIMT), in a relatively large patient cohort with suspected coronary artery disease, and further compare those to common carotid artery IMT (cIMT) that is an accepted surrogate marker of atherosclerosis.MethodsFour hundred and sixteen patients referred to myocardial perfusion scintigram (MPS) were recruited, and cIMT and rIMT were scanned using conventional and very high-resolution ultrasound (55 MHz transducer), respectively. A number of plasma biomarkers were also measured.ResultsBoth cIMT and rIMT were similarly correlated with disease history, MPS-verified ischemia, carotid plaque burden, and lipid status. Repeated measurement of rIMT showed acceptable variability.ConclusionRadial artery IMT may constitute a novel feasible imaging biomarker for systemic atherosclerosis burden, which may be used in future imaging trials to evaluate, e.g. anti-atherosclerotic treatments.

► We explore radial artery IMT and clinical correlates in patients with suspected CAD. ► Very high resolution ultrasound measures radial artery structure with great accuracy. ► Radial artery IMT correlates to traditional risk markers in suspected CAD patients. ► Radial artery IMT might be a novel vascular surrogate marker.

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