Assessing the blood pressure waveform of the carotid artery using an ultrasound image processing method.
- Author:
Effat SOLEIMANI
1
;
Manijhe MOKHTARI-DIZAJI
;
Nasser FATOURAEE
;
Hazhir SABERI
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Ultrasonography; Carotid arteries; Arterial pressure; Computer assisted image processing; Calibration
- MeSH: Arterial Pressure; Blood Pressure*; Calibration; Carotid Arteries*; Carotid Artery, Common; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Male; Manometry; Methods*; Radial Artery; Sphygmomanometers; Ultrasonography*
- From: Ultrasonography 2017;36(2):144-152
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
- Abstract: PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to introduce and implement a noninvasive method to derive the carotid artery pressure waveform directly by processing diagnostic sonograms of the carotid artery. METHODS: Ultrasound image sequences of 20 healthy male subjects (age, 36±9 years) were recorded during three cardiac cycles. The internal diameter and blood velocity waveforms were extracted from consecutive sonograms over the cardiac cycles by using custom analysis programs written in MATLAB. Finally, the application of a mathematical equation resulted in time changes of the arterial pressure. The resulting pressures were calibrated using the mean and the diastolic pressure of the radial artery. RESULTS: A good correlation was found between the mean carotid blood pressure obtained from the ultrasound image processing and the mean radial blood pressure obtained using a standard digital sphygmomanometer (R=0.91). The mean absolute difference between the carotid calibrated pulse pressures and those measured clinically was −1.333±6.548 mm Hg. CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggest that consecutive sonograms of the carotid artery can be used for estimating a blood pressure waveform. We believe that our results promote a noninvasive technique for clinical applications that overcomes the reproducibility problems of common carotid artery tonometry with technical and anatomical causes.