On the determination of turnover in vivo with tracers

1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (3) ◽  
pp. E417-E424
Author(s):  
J. Katz

Theoretical and practical aspects of the application of tracer methods for the measurement of turnover of blood-borne compounds are discussed, with special regard to lactate. The validity of the application of the tracer into the aortic arch and sampling from the right atrium (A-V), the administration of tracer into the vena cava and sampling from the aorta (V-A), and sampling to the determination of turnover are examined, using numerical examples. It is shown that the difference between specific activity in arterial and mixed venous blood depends mainly on the cardiac output, the ratio of tracee turnover to the mass of circulating tracee, and the sites of production and utilization of the tracee. Conditions are shown under which the A-V and V-A modes overestimate or underestimate the true rate of turnover. In theory, the A-V mode provides an exact estimate of turnover when the mean specific activity of the tracee in the whole body equals the specific activity of mixed venous blood in the right heart. It is shown that, for compounds with a high turnover rate, the underestimate in the A-V mode is small, and the mode provides a close approximation of true turnover. The underestimate in the V-A mode at high turnover rates is extensive. Experimental evidence indicates that, in several animal species, the specific activity of lactate and several amino acids in several organs and tissues nearly equals that in the venous blood, with the A-V mode providing a close approximation of the true turnover for these compounds.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (4) ◽  
pp. E597-E606 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Sacca ◽  
G. Toffolo ◽  
C. Cobelli

In turnover studies, both at whole body and regional level, sources of tracer and tracee are in general nonidentical thus resulting in nonuniformity of specific activity (SA). Guidelines are available in literature to deal with the heterogeneous SA problem, and either the V-A or A-V modes, based on the arterial and mixed venous blood SA, respectively, have been recommended for different substrates. In particular, the A-V mode is considered the method of choice for studying lactate, amino acids, free fatty acid, etc. Guidelines are based on specific models chosen to describe kinetic and circulatory events of the substance under study but are often conflicting. A unitary physiological framework to understand assumptions of various models is also lacking. In this paper, we first review these models to assess their domain of validity. In particular, we point out major drawbacks that relate to the tissue compartment being treated as a lumped well-mixed pool with a single SA value. We then attempt to handle the nonuniform tissue SA by employing a more physiological model. The tissue system is thought to be made up of elementary units connected in parallel and categorized according to their functional ability to affect incoming SA. Potential changes of SA within individual units are examined. Thus each tissue unit may provide a different contribution to the overall change in SA, as measured in mixed venous blood. A spatial profile of SA is also identified both along the direction of blood flow and transversely toward the inner cellular space. This distributed model allows assessment of the domain of validity of V-A and A-V modes. We show that, in general, the V-A mode underestimates the production rate both at whole body and regional level, whereas the A-V mode can either under- or overestimate it.


1961 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 1029-1033 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerd J. A. Cropp ◽  
Julius H. Comroe

The Pco2 of mixed venous blood has been increased abruptly by 5—49 mm Hg, without altering the volume or pressure of blood returning to the right ventricle, by infusion of blood with 550—700 mm Hg Pco2 into the right atrium, and simultaneous withdrawal of equal volumes of blood from the inferior vena cava. Twenty-five such blood exchanges in four anesthetized cats, four anesthetized dogs, and three unanesthetized dogs failed, with one exception, to increase respiratory frequency or tidal volume if PaCOCO2 remained constant; respiration increased only when PaCOCO2 rose. Correlation of ventilatory minute volume with PvCOCO2 was poor ( r = 0.296; P > 0.1) but was good with PaCOCO2 ( r = 0.608; P < 0.001). Experiments on the innervated and denervated carotid body (dog) demonstrated that chemoreceptors can respond rapidly (0.5 sec) to changes in PaOO2 or PaCOCO2. The absence of demonstrable ventilatory response to increased PvCOCO2 over periods of 0.5–3.0 min in animals in whom increments in PaCOCO2 led promptly to increased ventilation indicates that there are no CO2 receptors in the precapillary pulmonary circulation of importance in the physiological regulation of respiration. Submitted on May 25, 1961


1962 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 885-892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert H. Niden ◽  
Charles Mittman ◽  
Benjamin Burrows

Methods have been presented for assessing pulmonary diffusion by the “equilibration technique” in the experimental intact dog and perfused lung while controlling ventilation with a whole body respirator. No significant change in diffusion of carbon monoxide was noted between open and closed chest anesthetized animals, with duration of anesthesia in the intact dog, or with duration of perfusion of the isolated dog's lung. There was no demonstrable difference in diffusion when arterialized blood was used as the perfusate in place of mixed venous blood in the lung perfusions suggesting that within the range studied the Po2, Pco2, and pH of pulmonary artery blood does not directly affect the diffusion of carbon monoxide. Retrograde perfusions of dogs' lungs did not significantly alter diffusion, suggesting that pulmonary venous resistance was not significantly lower than pulmonary arterial resistance in the perfused dog lung at the flows and pressures studied. The equilibration technique for measuring pulmonary diffusion and assessing the uniformity of diffusion was well suited to the study of pulmonary diffusing characteristics in the experimental animal. Submitted on January 8, 1962


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