1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to medical diagnostic equipment, and more particularly to medical diagnostic equipment related to the measurement and interpretation of blood pressures.
2. Description of the Related Art
The effects of high blood pressure continues to be a serious health problem. In the early 1990's, it was reported that two-thirds of Americans die with atherosclerotic blood vessels and that one-half of all Americans die as a result of these lesions.
There are many possible causes of high blood pressure each relating to different physiological mechanisms. In response, different hypertensive pharmaceuticals have been developed, each targeting one or more of the potential mechanisms. Examples are calcium channel blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, beta-blocking drugs and their hybrids, diuretics, centrally-acting alpha2 agonists, alpha1-blocking agents, vasodilators, and adrenergic-blocking agents. Some of these medications act primarily on the microvascular (peripheral) resistance to blood flow, others on the lowered distensibility of larger arteries, cardiac output, or on various combinations of these.
Medical doctors and other practitioners routinely determine systolic and diastolic blood pressures using an inflatable cuff and sphygmomanometer and measure heart rate by manual timing of the pulse. Possible disease states are inferred from these values and this may lead to the use of additional diagnostic tests. The additional tests, such as measurement of cardiac output, for example, are often more invasive, time-consuming, and expensive. For these reasons, practitioners may prescribe medicines without performing them. This less-than-optimal therapy increases the likelihood of adverse side effects and when more than one agent is involved, increases the potential for undesirable drug interaction.
Clearly, in deciding on which type of hypertensive medication to prescribe for a particular patient, it is desirable to identify the underlying causes so that an informed decision, based on an accurate and timely diagnosis, can be made.
The present invention provides a method and associated apparatus, which combine measures of systolic and diastolic blood pressure and pulse frequency (heart rate), producing quantitative data on normalized diastolic distensibility, normalized peripheral resistance, and a parameter based on these which is independent of cardiac output. These results can be compared with normal and abnormal results from recorded empirical data.
In one aspect of the present invention, the method can include measuring, with standard or automatic equipment, the systolic and diastolic blood pressures, and pulse frequency (heart rate) of a patient; entering, electronically or with a keyboard, the data into a preprogrammed computer; reading from the computer display, normalized diastolic distensibility and normalized peripheral resistance, the product of theses two quantities, and the relation of these quantities to stored normal or abnormal distributions of such quantities for comparable individuals plus a list of medications that are indicated in those abnormal conditions.
In another aspect of the present invention, a medical diagnostic method using systolic and diastolic blood pressures, and pulse frequency of a patient is provided to compute a normalized diastolic distensibility value and a normalized peripheral resistance value, and to compute the product of the normalized diastolic distensibility value and the normalized peripheral resistance value to generate a first product value. The first product value is compared to a stored distribution of normalized diastolic distensibility and normalized peripheral resistance values for comparable individuals to determine if the first product value is equivalent to a value determined to indicate an abnormal condition.
The field of the present invention relates to measuring and interpreting blood pressures, bp, and pulse rate, f, in terms of hardening of the arterioles vs. peripheral resistance to blood flow. The venue for these actions can be a medical practitioner's office or any inpatient or outpatient location. The present method departs from current procedures by measuring blood pressure and pulse rate and deducing normalized values of arterial distensibility and peripheral resistance without using a transesophageal transducer or catheter insertion in a blood vessel.
The scope of the invention is defined by the claims, which are incorporated into this section by reference. A more complete understanding of embodiments of the present invention will be afforded to those skilled in the art, as well as a realization of additional advantages thereof, by a consideration of the following detailed description of one or more embodiments. Reference will be made to the appended sheets of drawings that will first be described briefly.
Embodiments of the present invention and their advantages are best understood by referring to the detailed description that follows. It should be appreciated that like reference numerals are used to identify like elements illustrated in one or more of the figures.
At each ventricular ejection contraction, a volume of blood, the stroke volume is injected into the aorta. The aorta stretches to accommodate the stroke volume and an accompanying pressure pulse launches down the aorta into the main arteries.
The pressure in the arterial tree is related to the distension of the arteries. As shown in
δVi=DiδP [1]
where δVi denotes the change in volume in the ith artery due to a pressure change δP, and Di denotes the distensibility of the ith artery.
The pressure in the arterial tree does not remain elevated after injection of a stroke volume of blood, because the pressure drives the blood from the arterial tree into the microvasculature.
As shown in
dV/dt=−P/Z [2]
Here, Z denotes the resistance to flow presented by the microvasculature fed by the arteries. This gives an exponential pressure decline—a smoothed version of the arterial pressure decline seen in
P=PD+δP [3]
Similarly, the instantaneous volume of the arterial tree is equal to the sum of the volume just before a stroke volume is injected, VD, plus the sum of the volumes δVi of eq. [1]
V=VD+ΣδVi [4]
On inserting [1] and [3] into [2]
dδP/dt=−(1/DZ)(PD+δP) [5]
where
D=ΣDi [6]
the sum being over the body arteries. The general solution to equation [5] is
δP−PD+Cexp(−t/DZ) [7]
The constant C can be evaluated at t=0 where it is known that by definition the increment in pressure is equal to the difference between the systolic pressure PS and the diastolic pressure PD
δP(t=0)=PS−PD [8]
Accordingly,
C=PS [9]
and so
P=PD+δP=PSexp(−t/DZ) [10]
If the pulse rate, f, is some number of pulses per minute, then the end of the period, t, occurs when t=1/f. At that time, the pressure must once again be the diastolic pressure PD. Thus, the relationship can be shown as:
PS=PDexp(1/DZf) [11]
Since the arterial distensibility D, peripheral resistance Z, and pulse rate f, all enter into the exponent in this relationship, the ratio of systolic to diastolic pressure can depend sensitively on these parameters.
At t=0, the total change in volume from the diastolic volume (the volume just before injection of the stroke volume) must be equal to the stroke volume VS. Equation [1] then shows (on using eq. [8]) that:
VS=D(PS−PD) [12]
The cardiac output <dV/dt> is the product of the pulse rate and the stroke volume. Then
<dV/dt>=fD(PS−PD) [13]
From [13] and [11]:
Arterial distensibility: D=<dV/dt>[f(PS−PD)]−1 [14]
Peripheral resistance Z=(PS−PD)[<dV/dt>ln(PS/PD)]−1 [15]
Equations [14] and [15] show that:
DN=D/<dV/dt>=[f(PS−PD)]−1 [16]
RN=Z<dV/dt>=(PS−PD)[ln(PS/PD)]−1 [17]
The left sides of [16] and [17] are respectively, normalized distensibility, DN, and normalized peripheral resistance, RN. As shown, these terms are expressible solely in terms of quantities routinely and easily measured in local medical offices and represent parameters which are normalized by cardiac output. The product of these values DR=DNRN, is independent of cardiac output. The significance and utility of eqs. [16] and [17] derives from records of their values in association with several medical conditions.
The normal reference values of blood pressures for typical subjects are shown in
The RN is independent of pulse rate, while the DN depends on pulse rate.
The systolic and diastolic pressures, expressed numerically in a consistent set of units, for example, torr, are entered into computer 106. The difference between these pressure numbers is produced and then divided by the natural logarithm of their ratio. The result is the RN.
In the embodiment shown in
The three histograms 132, 134 and 136 shown in
The utility of these normalized measures is given in an example of a hypertensive scleroderma patient for whom values for blood pressure readings, heart rate, DN, and RN obtained over a four month period are displayed in
Although the present invention is described with reference to the presently preferred embodiments, it is understood that the invention as defined by the claims is not limited to these described embodiments. Various other changes and modifications to the invention will be recognized by those skilled in this art and will still fall within the scope and spirit of the invention, as defined by the accompanying claims.