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ESTIMATION OF THE PULMONARY CAPILLARY VOLUME AND ENDOTHELIUM BARRIER FUNCTION USING THE MULTIPLE INDICATOR DILUTION METHOD

Primary tabs

Said  H. AUDI

 

Univ.

Marquette

Spec.

Biomedical Engineering

Deg.

Year

#Pages

Ph.D.

1993

210

Let h(t) be the probability density function of transit times. The following equations relate the moments (mean transit time, t, variance, σ2 , and skewness, m3 ) of the capillary function, hc (t); of the extravascular function, he(t), and of the noncapillary function, hn(t) to the moments of the venous concentration versus time curves for a vascular reference indicator, CR(t), and a flow-limited diffusible indicator, CD(t), following a bolus injection of the indicators upstream from the lung:

 

The moments of hc (t) can be estimated if the injected bolus includes, along with the vascular reference indicator, at least two flow‑limited diffusible indicators each with a different tθ. A least squares optimization procedure can then be used to specify the moments of hc (t). This approach was applied to isolated dog lung lobes with [14C] diazepam as the diffusible indicator.

The tissue‑ to‑perfusate partition coefficient for [14C] diazepam could be adjusted to any desired value by altering the perfusate albumin concentration. Thus, by making two injections at different perfusate albumin concentrations, data were obtained in a manner equivalent to making one injection with two flow‑limited diffusible indicators each with a different   tθ. The estimated capillary mean transit time(blood volume) was about 48% of the total lobar mean transit time (blood volume), and the relative dispersion of the hc (t) was about 75%. Using the estimated moments of the capillary transit time distribution, an optimization procedure for estimating the permeability‑surface area product(PS) for barrier‑limited indicators exchanged via linear uptake processes is suggested