

The celiac artery has a high-resistance pattern at its origin, with a small amount of reversed flow in early diastole. Its distal portion and branches lose the reversed early-diastolic flow component, showing continuous low-resistance forward flow throughout the cardiac cycle .
With the body in a fasting state, flow through the superior mesenteric artery has a high-resistance pattern, with a small amount of reversed flow in early diastole (Fig a). After a meal, the PSV and diastolic velocities increase. The reversed diastolic flow disappears, a low-resistance pattern develops, and the systolic spectral peak broadens (Fig b).
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