J. Penaz et al., VIBRATION PLETHYSMOGRAPHY - A METHOD FOR STUDYING THE VISCOELASTIC PROPERTIES OF FINGER ARTERIES, Medical & biological engineering & computing, 35(6), 1997, pp. 633-637
Vibration plethysmography records changes in vascular volume produced
by fast vibrations of cuff pressure. From these, waveforms of dynamic
vascular compliance (DVC) are obtained. A total of 46 recordings of DV
C, photo-electric plethysmogram (PG), cuff pressure (CP), and indirect
blood pressure (BP) are performed on two adjacent fingers (third and
fourth) in 23 healthy subjects. The shape and polarity of the DVC wave
form markedly depends upon CP or transmural pressure (TP) (TP=BP - CP)
. The correlation coefficient between DVC and PG waveforms is nearly -
1 at negative mean TP, near zero at zero TP, and approaches +1 at posi
tive TP. For CP moving between systolic and diastolic BP, the DVC wave
form shows a diastolic peak, with its maximum close to the zero value
of instantaneous TP. xy-diagrams of PG against TP and of DVC against T
P plotted for the diastolic phase of single pulses reveal a close coin
cidence of the DVC peak with the maximum slope of the PG/TP curve. A s
imilar relationship appears when slow changes in PG and the amplitude
of PG pulse waves are plotted against mean TP.