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1.
A venous occlusion plethysmography using radionuclide(RN) was introduced for the measurement of the limb blood flow. This technique, called RN plethysmography, can be carried out in a subject who has been previously administered RN intravenously for the routine angiographic examination. The blood flow is calculated from the initial slope of the RN count rate change (RN accumulation curve) due to venous occlusion. In this study, this method was compared with electrical admittance plethysmography. The blood flow values determined by these two methods correlated well with each other.  相似文献   

2.
Ten normal healthy subjects performed a rhythmic handgrip at 30% MVC (maximal voluntary contraction) with and without arterial occlusion of the same limb. Contralateral forearm and calf venous capacitance were simultaneously measured by venous occlusion plethysmography. During rhythmic handgrip at 30% MVC contralateral venous capacitance decreased by -7.17% in the forearm and by -5.14% in the calf. With arterial occlusion the decreases in venous capacitance were even more pronounced: contralateral forearm -14.4% and calf -13.1%. In a second set of experiments (n = 5) rhythmic handgrip at 30% MVC with arrest of the forearm circulation 5 s prior to the cessation of contraction was applied to examine the influence of chemically sensitive metaboreceptors per se on the evoked limb venoconstriction. During the postexercise arterial occlusion forearm venous volume decreased further to -30.6% whereas calf venous volume increased slightly but remained below the control value. After the cessation of the arterial occlusion both forearm and calf capacitance returned to baseline values. Thus, this study provided evidence that as well as a chemically generated reflex arising from the working muscle, central command was found to be involved in the increase in venomotor tone in the nonexercising limbs during rhythmic handgrip at 30% MVC.  相似文献   

3.
Venous occlusion plethysmography is a simple but elegant technique that has contributed to almost every major area of vascular biology in humans. The general principles of plethysmography were appreciated by the late 1800s, and the application of these principles to measure limb blood flow occurred in the early 1900s. Plethysmography has been instrumental in studying the role of the autonomic nervous system in regulating limb blood flow in humans and important in studying the vasodilator responses to exercise, reactive hyperemia, body heating, and mental stress. It has also been the technique of choice to study how human blood vessels respond to a variety of exogenously administered vasodilators and vasoconstrictors, especially those that act on various autonomic and adrenergic receptors. In recent years, plethysmography has been exploited to study the role of the vascular endothelium in health and disease. Venous occlusion plethysmography is likely to continue to play an important role as investigators seek to understand the physiological significance of newly identified vasoactive factors and how genetic polymorphisms affect the cardiovascular system in humans.  相似文献   

4.
Strain gauges employed in plethysmography for determination of limb blood flow tend to counter the expansion of the limb during venous occlusion. Traditionally a mechanical calibration is performed in situ to compensate for tissue compressibility. Greenfield, Whitney, and Mowbray stated that, otherwise, large errors would result (Br. Med. Bull. 19: 101-109, 1963). Nonetheless, not all of the recent reports on skin blood flow in humans have been based on a calibration procedure that corrects for tissue compressibility. To evaluate the significance of this problem, we developed a new strain-gauge holder that made possible frequent, reproducible, stretching of a single-strand Whitney gauge in situ. We compared the apparent sensitivity thus obtained to electrical or bench mechanical determinations. We independently determined tissue compressibility by recording limb circumference as tension in a circumferential tube was varied. Both techniques showed that tissue compressibility is a small source of error (5%) and that compressibility decreases during occlusion. Therefore the cumbersome holder and potential artifacts associated with the traditional technique need not be tolerated. We also investigated the consequences of nonuniform tension distribution and temperature changes; practical considerations for dealing with these are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
John Gamble  Michael J Joyner  Niki M Dietz  John T Shepherd 《Journal of applied physiology》2005,98(2):762; author reply 762-762; author reply 763
Venous occlusion plethysmography is a simple but elegant technique that has contributed to almost every major area of vascular biology in humans. The general principles of plethysmography were appreciated by the late 1800s, and the application of these principles to measure limb blood flow occurred in the early 1900s. Plethysmography has been instrumental in studying the role of the autonomic nervous system in regulating limb blood flow in humans and important in studying the vasodilator responses to exercise, reactive hyperemia, body heating, and mental stress. It has also been the technique of choice to study how human blood vessels respond to a variety of exogenously administered vasodilators and vasoconstrictors, especially those that act on various autonomic and adrenergic receptors. In recent years, plethysmography has been exploited to study the role of the vascular endothelium in health and disease. Venous occlusion plethysmography is likely to continue to play an important role as investigators seek to understand the physiological significance of newly identified vasoactive factors and how genetic polymorphisms affect the cardiovascular system in humans.  相似文献   

6.
Venous occlusion strain gauge plethysmography (VOP) is based on the assumption that the veins are occluded and arterial inflow is undisturbed by the venous cuff pressure. Literature is not clear concerning the pressure that should be used. The purpose of this study was to determine the optimal venous occlusion pressure at which the highest arterial inflow is achieved in the forearm, calf, and leg by using VOP. We hypothesized that, for each limb segment, an optimal (range of) venous cuff pressure can be determined. Arterial inflow in each limb segment was measured in nine healthy individuals by VOP by using pressures ranging from 10 mmHg up to diastolic blood pressure. Arterial inflows were similar at cuff pressures between 30 and 60 mmHg for the forearm, leg, and calf. Arterial inflow in the forearm was significantly lower at 10 mmHg compared with the other cuff pressures. In addition, arterial inflows at 20 mmHg tended to be lower in each limb segment than flow at higher cuff pressures. In conclusion, no single optimum venous cuff pressure, at which a highest arterial inflow is achieved, exists, but rather a range of optimum cuff pressures leading to a similar arterial inflow. Venous cuff pressures ranging from 30 mmHg up to diastolic blood pressure are recommended to measure arterial inflow by VOP.  相似文献   

7.
The method of venous occlusion plethysmography improved by introduction of differential and logarithmic-computing signal amplifiers was used to study the time course of blood inflow to the limbs in 35 healthy individuals and 115 patients with diseases of lower limb veins. Two types of the time course of the vein blood content were defined. With type I the volume velocity (VV) of blood supply to the segment under study decreases, whereas with type II the VV first decreases and then remains unchanged for a long time. Type I occurs in 76% of healthy individuals, type II in 74% of patients. With type II the increment of the vein capacity is significantly reduced in both healthy individuals and in patients with varicose veins. Moreover, in healthy individuals, the VV, the time of constant venous volume attainment, and the rate of blood outflow from veins (after occlusion removal) significantly differ as well in types I and II. Both types of the blood content remain unchanged while both applying the functional tests and during examinations at varying times. It is assumed that type II blood content is determined by greater rigidity of the venous vessels.  相似文献   

8.
Physical inactivity or deconditioning is an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. In contrast to exercise, the vascular changes that occur as a result of deconditioning have not been characterized. We used 4 wk of unilateral lower limb suspension (ULLS) to study arterial and venous adaptations to deconditioning. In contrast to previous studies, this model is not confounded by denervation or microgravity. Seven healthy subjects participated in the study. Arterial and venous characteristics of the legs were assessed by echo Doppler ultrasound and venous occlusion plethysmography. The diameter of the common and superficial femoral artery decreased by 12% after 4 wk of ULLS. Baseline calf blood flow, as measured by plethysmography, decreased from 2.1 +/- 0.2 to 1.6 +/- 0.2 ml.min(-1).dl tissue(-1). Both arterial diameter and calf blood flow returned to baseline values after 4 wk of recovery. There was no indication of a decrease in flow-mediated dilation of the superficial femoral artery after ULLS deconditioning. This means that functional adaptations to inactivity are not simply the inverse of adaptations to exercise. The venous pressure-volume curve is shifted downward after ULLS, without any effect on compliance. In conclusion, deconditioning by 4 wk of ULLS causes significant changes in both the arterial and the venous system.  相似文献   

9.
Although skeletal muscle perfusion is fundamental to proper muscle function, in vivo measurements are typically limited to those of limb or arterial blood flow, rather than flow within the muscle bed itself. We present a noninvasive functional MRI (fMRI) technique for measuring perfusion-related signal intensity (SI) changes in human skeletal muscle during and after contractions and demonstrate its application to the question of occlusion during a range of contraction intensities. Eight healthy men (aged 20-31 yr) performed a series of isometric ankle dorsiflexor contractions from 10 to 100% maximal voluntary contraction. Axial gradient-echo echo-planar images (repetition time = 500 ms, echo time = 18.6 ms) were acquired continuously before, during, and following each 10-s contraction, with 4.5-min rest between contractions. Average SI in the dorsiflexor muscles was calculated for all 240 images in each contraction series. Postcontraction hyperemia for each force level was determined as peak change in SI after contraction, which was then scaled to that obtained following a 5-min cuff occlusion of the thigh (i.e., maximal hyperemia). A subset of subjects (n = 4) performed parallel studies using venous occlusion plethysmography to measure limb blood flow. Hyperemia measured by fMRI and plethysmography demonstrated good agreement. Postcontraction hyperemia measured by fMRI scaled with contraction intensity up to approximately 60% maximal voluntary contraction. fMRI provides a noninvasive means of quantifying perfusion-related changes during and following skeletal muscle contractions in humans. Temporal changes in perfusion can be observed, as can the heterogeneity of perfusion across the muscle bed.  相似文献   

10.
Previous research has shown that MVO (Maximum Venous Outflow), VR (Venous Reflux), VE (Venous Emptying) and the respiratory waves recording are useful in differentiating occlusion and recanalization in postphlebitic syndrome. In the present work strain-gauge plethysmography was employed to quantitate the venous function after deep venous thrombosis of the legs. The studies were performed in a vascular laboratory with controlled temperature (23 to 25 C); records were obtained by a plethysmograph Parks mod. 270 connected to a Hewlett-Packard multi-channel mod. 7700. 17 patients (12 males, 5 females), mean age 55 years (range 24-75) that presented femoropopliteal thrombophlebitis documented by phlebography at the admission to the hospital were examined. MVO with and without superficial veins occlusion was measured by a mercury in silastic strain-gauge placed circumferentially about the calf. A pneumatic cuff thigh was inflated to 60 mm Hg. VE was measured in patients lying in inclined bed with the lower extremities 100 cm below the heart level compressing the calf with a pneumatic cuff 10 times for 5 seconds; the strain-gauge was placed on the foot level. VR after Valsalva's maneuver and the respiratory waves were recorded by a strain-gauge positioned at the maximum girth about the calf in patients lying on inclinated bed with the lower extremities 50 cm below the heart level. The result are here indicated: (Table: see text) There was differences in the evolution of venous function after deep venous thrombosis of the legs for each patient. Strain-gauge plethysmography may become evaluable non invasive technique in the evaluation of deep venous thrombosis evolution in the legs. The therapeutic assessment of postphlebitic syndrome.  相似文献   

11.
We validated a noninvasive radionuclide plethysmography technique to evaluate peripheral arterial blood flow during reactive hyperemia. This method, based on the measurement of blood volume variations during repetitive venous occlusions, was compared with strain-gauge venous impedance plethysmography. The technique uses 99mTc-labeled autologous red blood cells scintigraphy to determine the rate of change of forearm scintigraphic counts during venous occlusion. Thirteen subjects were simultaneously evaluated with radionuclide and impedance plethysmography. Six baseline flow measurements were performed to evaluate the reproducibility of each method. Twenty-seven serial measurements were then made to evaluate flow variation during forearm reactive hyperemia. After 30 min of recovery, resting forearm blood flows were again evaluated. Impedance and radionuclide methods showed excellent reproducibility with intraclass correlation coefficients of 0.96 and 0.93, respectively. There was also good correlation of flows between both methods during reactive hyperemia (r = 0.87). Resting flows at 30 min after reactive hyperemia were slightly lower than at baseline with both methods. We conclude that radionuclide plethysmography could be used for the noninvasive evaluation of forearm blood flow and its dynamic variations during reactive hyperemia.  相似文献   

12.
Blood flow in the right and left forearms was determined by venous occlusion plethysmography in ten healthy male subjects before and after training with a hand ergometer. The subjects in group A and B were trained using work loads of 1/3 and 1/2, respectively, of maximum grip strength 6 days/week for 6 weeks. It was found that the blood flow in the left (untrained or contralateral) forearm during exhaustive training of the right hand increased gradually with increasing training periods, and that after 6 weeks of training, grip strength, endurance and peak blood flow of the forearm increased significantly not only in the trained forearm, but also in the untrained forearm. From these results, it is suggested that the increase of blood flow in the contralateral limb after training may, at least in part, be related to the cross transfer effect of muscular endurance.  相似文献   

13.
Orthostasis is characterized by translocation of blood from the upper body and thorax into dependent venous structures. Although active splanchnic venoconstriction is known to occur, active limb venoconstriction remains controversial. Based on prior work, we initially hypothesized that active venoconstriction does occur in the extremities during orthostasis in response to baroreflex activation. We investigated this hypothesis in the arms and legs of 11 healthy volunteers, aged 13-19 yr, using venous occlusion strain gauge plethysmography to obtain the forearm and calf blood flows and to compute the capacitance vessel volume-pressure compliance relation. Subjects were studied supine and at -10, +20, and +35 degrees to load the baroreflexes. With +20 degrees of tilt, blood flow decreased and limb arterial resistance increased significantly (P < 0.05) compared with supine. With +35 degrees of tilt, blood flow decreased, limb arterial resistance increased, and heart rate increased, indicating parasympathetic withdrawal and sympathetic activation with arterial vasoconstriction. The volume-pressure relation was unchanged by orthostatic maneuvers. The results suggest that active venoconstriction in the limbs is not important to mild orthostatic response.  相似文献   

14.
The rate of capillary filtration after 5 minutes' ischaemia of the lower limbs was studied in man by the venous occlusive plethysmography method. The measured values were 3 times lower on an average than the control values. Comparison of the plethysmographic curves with isotope recordings after the intravenous administration of In-113m shows that volume changes induced by venous occlusion during reactive hyperaemia take place mainly intravascularly and do not allow any conclusions to be drawn on changes in blood-tissue fluid shifts.  相似文献   

15.
The measurement of peripheral blood flow by plethysmography assumes that the cuff pressure required for venous occlusion does not decrease arterial inflow. However, studies in five normal subjects suggested that calf blood flow measured with a plethysmograph was less than arterial inflow calculated from Doppler velocity measurements. We hypothesized that the pressure required for venous occlusion may have decreased arterial velocity. Further studies revealed that systolic diameter of the superficial femoral artery under a thigh cuff decreased from 7.7 +/- 0.4 to 5.6 +/- 0.7 mm (P less than 0.05) when the inflation pressure was increased from 0 to 40 mmHg. Cuff inflation to 40 mmHg also reduced mean velocity 38% in the common femoral artery and 47% in the popliteal artery. Inflation of a cuff on the arm reduced mean velocity in the radial artery 22% at 20 mmHg, 26% at 40 mmHg, and 33% at 60 mmHg. We conclude that inflation of a cuff on an extremity to low pressures for venous occlusion also caused a reduction in arterial diameter and flow velocity.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of 18 days of bed rest on leg and arm venous properties.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Venous function may be altered by bed rest deconditioning. Yet the contribution of altered venous compliance to the orthostatic intolerance observed after bed rest is uncertain. The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of 18 days of bed rest on leg and arm (respectively large and small change in gravitational gradients and use patterns) venous properties. We hypothesized that the magnitude of these venous changes would be related to orthostatic intolerance. Eleven healthy subjects (10 men, 1 woman) participated in the study. Before (pre) and after (post) 18 days of 6 degrees head-down tilt bed rest, strain gauge venous occlusion plethysmography was used to assess limb venous vascular characteristics. Leg venous compliance was significantly decreased after bed rest (pre: 0.048 +/- 0.007 ml x 100 ml(-1) x mmHg(-1), post: 0.033 +/- 0.007 ml x 100 ml(-1) x mmHg(-1); P < 0.01), whereas arm compliance did not change. Leg venous flow resistance increased significantly after bed rest (pre: 1.73 +/- 1.08 mmHg x ml(-1) x 100 ml x min, post: 3.10 +/- 1.00 mmHg x ml(-1) x 100 ml x min; P < 0.05). Maximal lower body negative pressure tolerance, which was expressed as cumulative stress index (pressure x time), decreased in all subjects after bed rest (pre: 932 mmHg x min, post: 747 mmHg x min). The decrease in orthostatic tolerance was not related to changes in leg venous compliance. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that after bed rest, leg venous compliance is reduced and leg venous outflow resistance is enhanced. However, these changes are not related to measures of orthostatic tolerance; therefore, alterations in venous compliance do not to play a major role in orthostatic intolerance after 18 days of head-down tilt bed rest.  相似文献   

17.
In this article, we intentionally present exclusively the results of our recent studies of arterial and venous hemodynamics as predictors of human orthostatic tolerance during space flight and after the return to Earth. The possibility of in-flight orthostatic tolerance prediction by arterial hemodynamic responses to the lower body negative pressure (LBNP) and venous hemodynamic changes in response to occlusion of the lower extremities is demonstrated. For the first time, three levels of cerebral blood flow deficits during the determination of orthostatic tolerance in the course of the LBNP test performed in microgravity. We offer quantitative arguments for the dependence of the cerebral blood flow deficit on the degree of tolerance of the LBNP test. Patterns of arterial hemodynamics during LBNP were successfully used to diagnose the actual orthostatic tolerance and to follow its trend during flight, which testifies to the possibility of predicting orthostatic tolerance changes in an individual cosmonaut during space flight. Occlusion plethysmography of the legs revealed three levels of response of the most informative venous parameters (capacity, distensibility, and rate of filling) of the lower extremities correlated to the severity of decrease in orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of changing ambient temperature on skin temperature was recorded in human subjects; also, its effect on blood flow was measured using venous occlusion and optical plethysmography. When cold stimulus was removed in stages using a heating cabinet, it was found that a biphasic flow response occurred in the fingers with each step change in temperature. There was a rapid transient rise followed by a decline to an equilibrium flow level. The transient rise occurred even when the temperature rose from 37 to 40 degrees C, although at this level the equilibrium remained unchanged. It is suggested that the transient rise was due to stimulation of Hensel's dynamic warmth receptors, whereas the rise in equilibrium temperature was due to removal of cold stimulus, which at low ambient temperatures maintains reflex vasoconstriction through activation of static cold receptors. Upper arm skin responded to removal of cold stimulus by a fall in temperature. Immersion of a different limb in cold water produced vasoconstriction in fingers but vasodilatation in the upper arm skin. It is suggested that this may be due to neurogenic vasodilatation, though the present work gives no indication as to pathways.  相似文献   

19.
We study the arterial and venous circulation of the normal leg by strain gauge plethysmography and venous occlusion (thigh tourniquet). We propose the application of a simplified linear physical model of the venous circulation. It helps to analyse the plethysmographic data recorded during and after the congestion. It ignores the arterial inflow and consider the post-occlusive venous volume decay in function of time as being monoexponential. The venous compliance (C) is measured when the volume has reached a steady-state level during the congestion (known pressure). The time-constant (T) characterizes the volume decay in function of time when the occlusion is released. The tourniquet is successively inflated with two levels of pressure (30 and 60 mm Hg) in order to check if the system is actually linear as predicted by the model. The venous outflow is not strictly monoexponential and the model is only suitable to describe the beginning of the curve. The compliance does not behave linearly, the values measured at 30 mm Hg, being higher than at 60 mm Hg ($ 26%). The time-constant T is slightly influenced by the level of pressures. The calculated resistance is therefore lower at low pressure. We also study the arterial inflow before and after the venous congestion (3 min, 60 mm Hg). We observe a post-venous occlusion hyperaemia (mean rest flow: 5.2%/min, mean hyperemic flow: 12.1%/min) followed by a drop of the inflow (mean minimal flow: 3.4%/min). We evaluate the quantitative influence of neglecting the arterial inflow on the computing of the venous properties. The simplification appears acceptable.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of lipemia on peripheral blood flow was studied in patients with and without peripheral vascular disease. Blood flow was measured by venous occlusion plethysmography in the calf and/or finger four to six hours after a fatty meal and after intravenous heparin. The abolition of postprandial lipemia by heparin was determined by measuring the plasma lactescence.Heparin resulted in no change in finger flow of either group or in calf flow in the control group. In nine out of 10 patients with occlusive vascular disease of the legs, it resulted in a small but significant increase of calf blood flow. No such alteration was found when heparin was given following a non-fatty meal.In 12 patients with intermittent claudication the clearing of postprandial lipemia by heparin caused prolongation of claudication time, as measured by the appearance of pain on treadmill exercise.It is concluded that, in some cases, postprandial lipemia is associated with a decrease in blood flow in a limb which is already the site of occlusive vascular disease.  相似文献   

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