| Literature DB >> 18710528 |
Lior Dayan1, Zohar Keidar, Ora Israel, Victor Milloul, Johnathan Sachs, Giris Jacob.
Abstract
Preserved blood flow to bone and soft tissue is essential for their normal function. To date only numerous methods are suitable for direct bone blood flow (BBF) measurement. Here, we introduce a novel quantitative method for bone and soft tissue blood flow (BBF and SBF, respectively) measurement. It involves a combination of SPECT/CT imaging for blood pool localization in a specific region of interest ("soft" and "hard" tissues composing a limb) with veno-occlusive plethysmography. Using it, we measured BBF and SBF in the four limbs of 10 healthy subjects. At steady state blood flow measurements in the four limbs were similar, ranging between 5.5-6.5 and 1.87-2.48 ml per 100 ml of tissue per minute for BBF and SBF, respectively. Our results are comparable to those in the literature. We concluded that SPECT/CT-plethysmography appears to be a readily available and easy to use method to measure BBF and SBF, and can be added to the armamentarium of methods for BBF measurements.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18710528 PMCID: PMC2527489 DOI: 10.1186/1749-799X-3-36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Figure 1SPECT/CT reconstruction with X-ray image showing volume (in ml) and counts in the bone (red) and total limb (green).
Figure 2Bone (upper graph) and soft tissue (lower graph) blood flow in each limb (RUL-right upper limb, LUL-left upper limb, RLL-right lower limb, LLL-left lower limb). Blood flow units are expressed in ml/100 ml tissue·min-1 units, mean value for each column is marked with transverse line).