Literature DB >> 3898927

Proposed methods for the measurement of regional renal blood flow using heat transfer analysis.

T Adams, W S Spielman, K R Holmes, S R Heisey, M M Chen.   

Abstract

The kidney, with its heterogeneous regional perfusion in the two anatomically and functionally distinct vascular beds of the renal cortex and medulla, and with its non-uniform blood vessel geometries, presents a unique challenge for measuring intrarenal blood flow distribution. Determining whole organ perfusion, on the other hand, is comparatively simple for the kidney, but it provides relatively little information about the suspected dependency of renal excretory function on local perfusion rate. Among the variety of methods proposed for gauging regional renal blood flow, some depend on measuring one or more of the tissue's thermal properties. The most straightforward, but least reliable, involve measurements either of focal tissue temperature alone, or of regional tissue thermal gradients. Simply using heat as a diffusible indicator, however, is unreliable as a measure of blood flow, for many of the same reasons that using an inert gas in a dilution technique is unreliable. Recently developed thermal analytical methods, though, hold promise for measuring local tissue blood flow with accuracy and precision. Two of them are reviewed here. One depends on measurement of the effective thermal conductivity of a small mass of tissue by evaluating the steady state ratio between regional unidirectional heat flux across it and the associated temperature gradient in one vector along a segment of it through an imposed spheroidal heat field. The other depends on analyses of tissue temperature decay subsequent to a controlled pulse of heat delivered through a small inserted thermistor bead. Both techniques use bioheat transfer equations to deduce regional blood flow by differentiating between heat dissipation due to local thermal conductivity and that attributable to the effects of regional convection. Although both methods are unavoidably invasive, neither produces debilitating damage in the tissue volume in which perfusion is measured, nor increases local temperature or metabolism enough to affect blood flow itself. Both techniques quantify local blood flow in small volumes of tissue by detailed evaluation of the many properties of tissue and blood which affect heat transfer, and both allow for a virtually unlimited number of nearly continuous sequential measurements at short (nom. 1 min) time intervals.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3898927     DOI: 10.1007/bf02584242

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng        ISSN: 0090-6964            Impact factor:   3.934


  29 in total

1.  Quantitative measurement of local blood flow with heat clearance.

Authors:  W Müller-Schauenburg; H Apfel; H Benzing; E Betz
Journal:  Basic Res Cardiol       Date:  1975 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 17.165

2.  Determinations of blood flow and shunting of 9- and 15-micrometer spheres in regional beds.

Authors:  F C Fan; G B Schuessler; R Y Chen; S Chien
Journal:  Am J Physiol       Date:  1979-07

3.  Intracortical distribution of renal blood flow in hemorrhagic shock in dogs.

Authors:  A Logan; P Jose; G Eisner; L Lilienfield; L Slotkoff
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  1971-09       Impact factor: 17.367

4.  The simultaneous measurement of thermal conductivity, thermal diffusivity, and perfusion in small volumes of tissue.

Authors:  J W Valvano; J T Allen; H F Bowman
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  1984-08       Impact factor: 2.097

5.  Continuous quantitative local cerebral blood flow measurement. Calibration of thermal conductivity measurements by the hydrogen clearance method.

Authors:  J F Cusick; J Myklebust
Journal:  Stroke       Date:  1980 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 7.914

6.  Microvascular contributions in tissue heat transfer.

Authors:  M M Chen; K R Holmes
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1980       Impact factor: 5.691

7.  Left ventricular cannulation for microsphere estimation of rabbit renal blood flow.

Authors:  J Bhattacharya; L J Beilin
Journal:  Am J Physiol       Date:  1980-05

8.  Pulse-decay method for measuring the thermal conductivity of living tissues.

Authors:  M M Chen; K R Holmes; V Rupinskas
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  1981-11       Impact factor: 2.097

9.  Cortical blood flow in controlled hypotension as measured by thermal diffusion.

Authors:  L P Carter; J R Atkinson
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1973-12       Impact factor: 10.154

10.  Effects of dopamine on canine intrarenal blood flow distribution during hemorrhage.

Authors:  R E Neiberger; J C Passmore
Journal:  Kidney Int       Date:  1979-03       Impact factor: 10.612

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  2 in total

1.  Single-fiber laser Doppler flowmetry. A method for deep tissue perfusion measurements.

Authors:  E G Salerud; P A Oberg
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  1987-05       Impact factor: 2.602

2.  The Flow of Blood-Based Hybrid Nanofluids with Couple Stresses by the Convergent and Divergent Channel for the Applications of Drug Delivery.

Authors:  Anwar Saeed; Niqab Khan; Taza Gul; Wiyada Kumam; Wajdi Alghamdi; Poom Kumam
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-10-20       Impact factor: 4.411

  2 in total

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