Actively Recruiting

Age: 70Years +
All Genders
NCT07205003

Evaluation of the Link Between Carotid Arterial Wall Viscosity and Major Neurocognitive Disorders

Led by University Hospital, Rouen · Updated on 2025-10-03

140

Participants Needed

1

Research Sites

239 weeks

Total Duration

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AI-Summary

What this Trial Is About

The mechanical behavior of conductance arteries is viscoelastic. While the elastic component has been extensively studied, the viscous component has often been neglected for methodological reasons and also because it was considered weak. Unlike a purely elastic solid, which exhibits instantaneous deformation/relaxation upon application/discontinuation of a force, a viscoelastic solid is characterized, from a mechanical point of view, by a delay between the application or discontinuation of the force and deformation. Thus, at the arterial level, the elasticity of the arterial wall allows the internal diameter to increase proportionally to the blood pressure during systole. The viscous component will induce a delay in diameter restoration, resulting in a larger diameter at each pressure level during the diastolic phase compared to the systolic phase. This results in a shift between the systolic and diastolic curves of the pressure-diameter relationship, creating a hysteresis loop. From a thermodynamic point of view, while a purely elastic material fully restores the energy stored during the loading phase, viscoelastic arteries will incompletely restore this energy. Thus, the surface of the hysteresis loop reflects the energy dissipated during each cardiac cycle (WV), and the area under the loading phase curve represents the energy stored by the arterial wall (WE) during the latter. Thus, arterial wall viscosity (APV) can be expressed either as the absolute value of WV or as a function of the stored energy (WV/WE). Physiologically, this energy loss is low. Its increase could be accompanied by excessive energy dissipation, leading to increased cardiac work and cardio-circulatory decoupling. Conversely, low parietal viscosity could lead to damage to peripheral organs by excessive transmission of pulsatile energy to the periphery due to lack of damping.

CONDITIONS

Official Title

Evaluation of the Link Between Carotid Arterial Wall Viscosity and Major Neurocognitive Disorders

Who Can Participate

Age: 70Years +
All Genders

Eligibility Criteria

Eligible

You may qualify if you...

  • Age over 70
  • Memory consultation with neurology or geriatrics
  • Brain MRI less than one year old or planned as part of cognitive assessment
  • Diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease or vascular dementia according to DSM-5, or memory complaint without dementia evidence
  • No objection from patient or caregiver
  • Patient covered by a health insurance plan
Not Eligible

You will not qualify if you...

  • Known unilateral or bilateral carotid stenosis or history of carotid surgery
  • Permanent carotid artery atrial fibrillation
  • Patient presenting with confusion
  • Known severe psychiatric illness (depression, psychosis, etc.)
  • Non-vascular, non-Alzheimer's dementia (e.g., Lewy Body Dementia, Parkinsonian Dementia, Progressive Supranuclear Palsy)
  • Refusal to participate
  • Mini Mental State score less than or equal to 10
  • Contraindication to MRI
  • Any acute decompensated pathology
  • Patient under guardianship or curatorship

AI-Screening

AI-Powered Screening

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Trial Site Locations

Total: 1 location

1

University Rouen Hospital

Rouen, France, 76031

Actively Recruiting

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Research Team

F

Frédéric FR ROCA, Doctor

CONTACT

P

Philippe PC CHASSAGNE, Professor

CONTACT

How is the study designed?

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Masking

N/A

Allocation

N/A

Model

N/A

Primary Purpose

N/A

Number of Arms

0

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