JŮZA, Tomáš and Daniel VLK. Immediate Effect of Physical Exercise on Blood Flow Velocity in Radial Artery in Young Adults. Lékař a technika. ČVUT, Fakulta biomedicínského inženýrství, 2018, vol. 48, No 4, p. 118-122. ISSN 0301-5491.
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Basic information
Original name Immediate Effect of Physical Exercise on Blood Flow Velocity in Radial Artery in Young Adults
Authors JŮZA, Tomáš and Daniel VLK.
Edition Lékař a technika, ČVUT, Fakulta biomedicínského inženýrství, 2018, 0301-5491.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Organization unit Faculty of Medicine
Keywords in English blood flow velocity, radial artery, doppler ultrasound, local physical exercise
Changed by Changed by: MUDr. Tomáš Jůza, učo 394007. Changed: 6/6/2019 14:23.
Abstract
Purpose: Quantify changes in blood flow velocity in the radial artery after local dynamic exercise and compare these results between a group of women and men. Acquire data of normal resting blood flow in the radial artery. Methods: We examined 42 healthy young volunteers (21 men and 21 women) of the age about 20. A pocket Doppler ultrasound device was used for measurements. Physical exercise was defined as one-minute-long, one-handed weightlifting. Hemodynamic parameters were registered during resting before exercise and immediately after exercise. Results: Resting baseline values: overall maximum blood flow velocity 26.49 cm/s (SD: 9.99 cm/s), mean blood flow velocity 8.46 cm/s (SD: 6.17 cm/s), and pulsatility index (PI) 5.46 (SD: 5.7) for the whole group. Mean percentage increase of maximum blood flow velocity is 36.5%, mean blood flow velocity 243%. PI was reduced by 52.8%. There was a presumed significant difference in the percentage change of PI between the group of women and men (p<0.05). There is also a typical change in velocity waveform after exercise. Conclusion: The most altered parameter is mean blood flow velocity, which corresponds to an observed change of velocity waveform probably caused by local vasodilatation lasting only for several seconds.
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