Literature DB >> 3897017

Sequestered tracer outflow recovery in multiple indicator dilution experiments.

C A Goresky, G G Bach, A W Wolkoff, C P Rose, D Cousineau.   

Abstract

The rapid, single injection, multiple indicator dilution technique has been, with suitable modeling of hepatic venous outflow curves, the standard approach for quantitative kinetic assessment of tracer cell entry and intracellular sequestration in the steady state, both in the in situ and the isolated perfused liver. Analysis of the underlying system yields, for a substance sequestered within liver cells, identical theoretical expressions for expected cumulative tracer fractional recovery and the steady-state fractional outflow recovery of the bulk substance whose behavior is being traced. Luxon and Forker (Am. J. Physiol. 1982; 243:G76-G89) pointed out that experimental cumulative tracer fractional recovery must match the value predicted by use of fitted model parameters in the theoretical recovery expression, and that this agreement must be regarded as the hallmark of successful fitting and modeling. Their attempts to demonstrate this agreement, by use of previously published data, were unsuccessful; this led them to question whether previous model analyses were valid. To reexamine the question we, therefore, analyzed three sets of data, on bilirubin, free fatty acid and galactose uptake, including those they had previously analyzed. We found excellent agreement between experimentally determined cumulative tracer recovery and theoretically predicted recovery. The theoretical recovery expression, now validated experimentally, provides a direct way of using fitted parameters for the rapid calculation of outflow recovery, which should prove generally useful in this area of kinetics. Demonstration of the expected agreement, moreover, restores confidence in the self-consistency of procedures used in the past to analyze multiple indicator dilution data.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3897017     DOI: 10.1002/hep.1840050516

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepatology        ISSN: 0270-9139            Impact factor:   17.425


  4 in total

1.  At physiologic albumin/oleate concentrations oleate uptake by isolated hepatocytes, cardiac myocytes, and adipocytes is a saturable function of the unbound oleate concentration. Uptake kinetics are consistent with the conventional theory.

Authors:  D Sorrentino; R B Robinson; C L Kiang; P D Berk
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1989-10       Impact factor: 14.808

2.  Oleate uptake by cardiac myocytes is carrier mediated and involves a 40-kD plasma membrane fatty acid binding protein similar to that in liver, adipose tissue, and gut.

Authors:  D Sorrentino; D Stump; B J Potter; R B Robinson; R White; C L Kiang; P D Berk
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1988-09       Impact factor: 14.808

3.  Pharmacokinetic modeling of the sinusoidal efflux of anionic ligands from the isolated perfused rat liver: the influence of albumin.

Authors:  J H Proost; H M Nijssen; C B Strating; D K Meijer; G M Groothuis
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1993-08

4.  Effects of lactate on pathways of glycogen formation in the perfused rat liver.

Authors:  Z Zhang; J Radziuk
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1991-12-01       Impact factor: 3.857

  4 in total

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