Abstract
Oxygen transport is believed to primarily occur via capillaries and depends on the oxygen tension gradient between the vessels and tissues. As blood flows along branching arterioles, the O 2 saturation drops, indicating either consumption or diffusion. The blood flow rate, the O 2 concentration gradient, and Krogh's O 2 diffusion constant (K) of the vessel wall are parameters affecting O 2 delivery. We devised a method for evaluating K of arteriolar wall in vivo using phosphorescence quenching microscopy to measure the partial pressure of oxygen in two areas almost simultaneously. The K value of arteriolar wall (inner diameter, 63.5 ± 11.9 μm; wall thickness, 18.0 ± 1.2 μm) was found to be 6.0 ± 1.2 × 10 -11 (cm 2/s)(ml O 2·cm -3 tissue·mmHg -1). The arteriolar wall O 2 consumption rate (M) was 1.5 ± 0.1 (ml O 2·100 cm -3 tissue·min -1), as calculated using Krogh's diffusion equation. These results suggest that the arteriolar wall consumes a considerable proportion of the O 2 that diffuses through it. © 2012 by The Keio Journal of Medicine.
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Sasaki, N., Horinouchi, H., Ushiyama, A., & Minamitani, H. (2012). A new method for measuring the oxygen diffusion constant and oxygen consumption rate of arteriolar walls. Keio Journal of Medicine, 61(2), 57–65. https://doi.org/10.2302/kjm.61.57
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