Guidlines
For practical purposes, there are numerous guidelines with concrete instructions. Since the measurement of ankle-brachial index and pulse wave velocity in many of these guidelines is required, we have collected relevant references for you.
It is particularly easy to measure the two parameters with the Vascassist.
- PAOD and ankle-brachial-index (58)
- Pulse wave velocity (16)
- Assessment of cardiovascular risk (38)
- Prevention (16)
- Guidlines (19)
- Individual Health Services (IHS) (19)
- Complementary and alternative medicine (19)
- Lexicon (6)
- Intra-Corporate Health Management (14)
- Information for Patients (51)
- Video films (20)
- Wound Care (4)
- Backlinks (5)
- Books (28)
- Practice materials (8)
- Aortic aneurysms (4)
- Miscellaneous (61)
- English weblinks (51)
- English books (7)
Most-read weblinks
- English weblinks
- Brachial–ankle pulse wave velocity: an index of central arterial stiffness?
- Correlation between Brachial-Ankle Pulse Wave Velocity and Arterial Compliance and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Elderly Patients with Arterioscleros...
- Low blood flow estimates in lower-leg arteries predict cardiovascular events
- Role of ankle-brachial pressure index as a predictor of coronary artery disease severity in patients with diabetes mellitus
- Brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity measured automatically by oscillometric method is elevated in diabetic patients with incipient nephropathy
- The Pulse Wave Velocity as an Early Indicator of Atherosclerosis in Diabetic Subjects
- Elevated Brachial-Ankle Pulse Wave Velocity Is Associated with Left Ventricular Hypertrophy in Hypertensive Patients after Stroke
- Combined use of brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity and ankle-brachial index for fast assessment of arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis in a community
- Pulse wave velocity in lower-limb arteries among diabetic patients with peripheral arterial disease
- Arterial Pulse Wave Velocity as a Marker of Poor Cognitive Function in an Elderly Community-Dwelling Population

