Literature DB >> 6346902

Kinetic interpretation of hepatic multiple-indicator dilution studies.

C A Goresky.   

Abstract

The single-injection, multiple-indicator dilution approach, together with an analysis based on a model of microcirculatory events, provides a way of determining the composition of and the rates of processes in the liver. By comparison with a vascular reference, labeled red cells, a set of interstitial materials are found to enter the Disse space in a delayed-wave, flow-limited fashion, larger materials being excluded from a proportion of the space, and labeled water is found to undergo flow-limited distribution into the liver cells. In contrast, many other substances exhibit barrier-limited exchange with the liver cells; their tracer outflow profiles consist of throughput material (which has entered the interstitium but not the liver cells) and of returning material (which has entered the cells, later to return to the vascular space). Intracellular metabolic sequestration or biliary secretion reduces the outflow recovery of returning tracer; it also results in decreasing steady-state concentrations along sinusoids and cells and, where the cell membrane is limiting, in a step-down in concentration across it.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6346902     DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.1983.245.1.G1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  16 in total

1.  Modeling of hepatic elimination and organ distribution kinetics with the extended convection-dispersion model.

Authors:  M S Roberts; Y G Anissimov
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1999-08

2.  A compartmental model of hepatic disposition kinetics: 1. Model development and application to linear kinetics.

Authors:  Yuri G Anissimov; Michael S Roberts
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 2.745

3.  Residence time distributions of solutes in the perfused rat liver using a dispersion model of hepatic elimination: 1. Effect of changes in perfusate flow and albumin concentration on sucrose and taurocholate.

Authors:  M S Roberts; S Fraser; A Wagner; L McLeod
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1990-06

4.  Availability predictions by hepatic elimination models for Michaelis-Menten kinetics.

Authors:  M S Roberts; J D Donaldson; D Jackett
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1989-12

5.  Analysis of nonlinear hepatic clearance of a cyclopentapeptide, BQ-123, with the multiple indicator dilution method using the dispersion model.

Authors:  A Hisaka; T Nakamura; Y Sugiyama
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  1999-01       Impact factor: 4.200

6.  Application of the dispersion model for description of the outflow dilution profiles of noneliminated reference indicators in rat liver perfusion studies.

Authors:  A J Schwab; W Geng; K S Pang
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1998-04

7.  Metabolite mean transit times in the liver as predicted by various models of hepatic elimination.

Authors:  G D Mellick; Y G Anissimov; A J Bracken; M S Roberts
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1997-08

8.  Tissue distribution kinetics as determinant of transit time dispersion of drugs in organs: application of a stochastic model to the rat hindlimb.

Authors:  M Weiss; M S Roberts
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1996-04

9.  A dispersion model of hepatic elimination: 2. Steady-state considerations--influence of hepatic blood flow, binding within blood, and hepatocellular enzyme activity.

Authors:  M S Roberts; M Rowland
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1986-06

10.  A dispersion model of hepatic elimination: 1. Formulation of the model and bolus considerations.

Authors:  M S Roberts; M Rowland
Journal:  J Pharmacokinet Biopharm       Date:  1986-06
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