Literature DB >> 8669709

Microvascular thermal equilibration in rat cremaster muscle.

L Zhu1, D E Lemons, S Weinbaum.   

Abstract

A new experimental approach was developed to obtain the first direct measurements of the axial countercurrent thermal equilibration in a microvascular tissue preparation using high resolution infrared thermography. Detailed surface temperature measurements were obtained for an exteriorized rat cremaster muscle in which pharmacological vasoactive agents were used to change the local blood flow Peclet number from 1 to 14 in the feeding artery. Under normal conditions, only the 1A arteries (> 70 microns diameter) showed thermal nonequilibration with the surrounding tissue. The theoretical model developed by Zhu and Weinbaum (28) for a two-dimensional tissue preparation with arbitrarily embedded countercurrent vessels was modified to include axial conduction and the presence of the supporting glass slide. This modified model was used to interpret the experimental results and to relate the surface temperature profiles to the bulk temperature profiles in the countercurrent artery and vein and the local average tissue temperature in the cross-sectional plane. Surface temperature profiles transverse to the vessel axis are shown to depend significantly on the tissue inlet temperature. The eigenfunction for the axial thermal equilibration depends primarily on the blood flow Peclet number and the environmental convective coefficient. The theoretical results predict that when rho(ar)*Pe is less than 1 mm (the range in our experiments), axial conduction is the dominant mode of axial thermal equilibration. For 1 < rho(ar)*PE < 3 mm, countercurrent blood flow becomes comparable to axial conduction, whereas, when rho(ar)*Pe > 3 mm, countercurrent blood flow is the dominant mode of axial thermal equilibration. Therefore, for rho(ar)*Pe > 3 mm the axial equilibration length is proportional to the blood flow Peclet number, as predicted previously by Zhu and Weinbaum in a study in which axial conduction was neglected. It also is shown that the axial decay of the tissue temperature at low perfusion rates can be described by a simple one-dimensional Weinbaum-Jiji equation with a newly derived conduction shape factor.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8669709     DOI: 10.1007/bf02771000

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


  23 in total

1.  Interstitial heating: experiments in artificially perfused bovine tongues.

Authors:  J Crezee; J Mooibroek; C K Bos; J J Lagendijk
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  1991-06       Impact factor: 3.609

2.  The matching of thermal fields surrounding countercurrent microvessels and the closure approximation in the Weinbaum-Jiji equation.

Authors:  S Weinbaum; L M Jiji
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  1989-11       Impact factor: 2.097

3.  Heat transport mechanisms in vascular tissues: a model comparison.

Authors:  J W Baish; P S Ayyaswamy; K R Foster
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  1986-11       Impact factor: 2.097

4.  An open cremaster muscle preparation for the study of blood vessels by in vivo microscopy.

Authors:  S Baez
Journal:  Microvasc Res       Date:  1973-05       Impact factor: 3.514

5.  An analytical model of the counter-current heat exchange phenomena.

Authors:  J W Mitchell; G E Myers
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  1968-08       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  A small artery heat transfer model for self-heated thermistor measurements of perfusion in the kidney cortex.

Authors:  G T Anderson; J W Valvano
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  1994-02       Impact factor: 2.097

7.  A new simplified bioheat equation for the effect of blood flow on local average tissue temperature.

Authors:  S Weinbaum; L M Jiji
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  1985-05       Impact factor: 2.097

8.  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

9.  A new approach for predicting the enhancement in the effective conductivity of perfused muscle tissue due to hyperthermia.

Authors:  L Zhu; D E Lemons; S Weinbaum
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  1995 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.934

10.  In situ analysis of alpha-adrenoceptors on arteriolar and venular smooth muscle in rat skeletal muscle microcirculation.

Authors:  J E Faber
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  1988-01       Impact factor: 17.367

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