Abstract
Measurement of regional myocardial blood flow (RMBF) is crucial in experimental studies of myocardial ischemia and reperfusion in dogs. The standard measurement technique uses radioactive microspheres; however, not all institutions are able to dispose of radioactive waste and therefore cannot make use of this method. We tested a new, nonradioactive microsphere, labeled with colors instead of nuclides. Simultaneous blood flow measurements with two nuclide-labeled and two colored microspheres were performed after coronary occlusion in dogs. Both techniques show a within-method correlation of r>0.98. Duplicate variability for paired RMBF values in 80 samples was 8.7±0.1% when computed with radioactive microspheres and 13.2±1.8% when computed with colored microspheres. There was a good correlation in the measurement of RMBF between the radioactive- and colored-microsphere methods (r=0.98). The best-fitting linear regression line was expressed by the formula: Colored-microsphere RMBF=1.11 (radioactive-microsphere RMBF)-0.02. When measured by colored microspheres, RMBF was approximately 8% higher than when computed with radioactive microspheres for blood flow values of 0-2 ml/min/g. When blood flow was increased pharmacologically to levels of 2-7.5 ml/min/g, colored microspheres yielded blood flow values 39% higher than the values computed by radioactive microspheres. We conclude that the nonradioactive, colored-microsphere method correlates with the radioactive technique, but at high flows, it yields values greater than those obtained with radioactive microspheres.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Hale, S. L., Alker, K. J., & Kloner, R. A. (1988). Evaluation of nonradioactive, colored microspheres for measurement of regional myocardial blood flow in dogs. Circulation, 78(2), 428–434. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.78.2.428
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