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The
HDI/PulseWave™
Hypertension Diagnostics, Inc.,
headquartered in Eagan, Minnesota, was founded in July 1988 to develop a
proprietary blood pressure waveform analysis methodology into a
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This non-invasive System is capable of measuring several hemodynamic parameters including arterial compliance (that is, the elasticity of an individual's arteries). Such measurements are useful to clinical researchers studying cardiovascular interventions in industry (for example, pharmaceutical manufacturers) and in academic and medical centers.
The Profiling Device in Action The
Medical College of Georgia's recent article presents the details: "A
new device that measures the stiffness of blood vessels as blood courses
through them is helping doctors at the Medical College of Georgia
determine whether a hormone secreted by the lining of these vessels
affects their elasticity..." GO
TO THE MCG SITE / VIEW ARTICLE
HDI's Technology HDI's technology measures a blood pressure waveform produced by the beating heart that HDI believes can be analyzed to provide an assessment of arterial elasticity. When the aortic valve closes after the heart has ejected its stroke volume of blood (the blood ejected during each heartbeat), the decay or decrease of blood pressure within the arteries prior to the next heartbeat forms a pressure curve or waveform, which is indicative of arterial elasticity. Subtle changes in arterial elasticity introduce changes in the arterial system that are reflected in the arterial blood pressure waveform, and research suggests that these changes in the function and structure of the arterial wall precede the development of diseases such as hypertension and diabetes. MORE
ABOUT CARDIOVASCULAR HEALTH
Product Development Utilizing the physiological phenomena associated with blood pressure waveforms, Drs. Jay N. Cohn and Stanley M. Finkelstein, professors at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis and two of the founders of HDI, developed in the early 1980’s a method for determining a measure of elasticity in both large and small arteries. The technique
involved an invasive procedure that placed a small catheter connected to a
pressure transducer into the patient’s artery in order to obtain a blood
pressure waveform that could be analyzed using a modified Windkessel
model. This model is a well-established electrical analog model which
describes the pressure changes during the diastolic phase of the cardiac
cycle in the circulatory system. VIEW
MORE ON PRODUCTS
Research Findings Subsequent to the initial studies of Drs. Cohn and Finkelstein, HDI developed a non-invasive approach. This blood pressure waveform or "pulse contour analysis" method provided an independent assessment of the elasticity or flexibility of the large arteries which expand to briefly store blood ejected by the heart, and of the very small arteries (and arterioles) which produce oscillations or reflections in response to the blood pressure waveform generated during each heart beat. This also provided HDI with a patent-protected technology platform to support its future business. By assessing the elasticity of the arterial system, clinical investigators have been able to identify a reduction in arterial elasticity in patients without evidence of traditional risk factors, suggesting the early presence of vascular disease. Furthermore, clinical research data has demonstrated that individuals with heart failure, coronary artery disease, hypertension and diabetes typically exhibit a loss of arterial elasticity. These abnormal blood vessel changes often appear to precede overt signs of cardiovascular disease and the occurrence of a heart attack or stroke by many years. Clinical investigators have also demonstrated an age-related loss of elasticity of both the large and small arteries suggesting that premature stiffening of an individual’s arteries is an apparent marker for the early onset of cardiovascular disease. Review Bibliography
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Our Vision: To be a world leader in the design, development, manufacture and distribution of medical products as well as in the dissemination of clinical information which improve the quality of human life through increased predictability of cardiovascular disease.
Our Mission: To establish HDI's cardiovascular profiling products as the standard for identifying and monitoring patients with cardiovascular disease.
Quality Policy:
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Copyright © 2007 Hypertension Diagnostics, Inc |
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