Search results for "Perfusion rate"
showing 2 items of 2 documents
Splenic blood flow and intrasplenic flow distribution in rats
1977
In 75 rats, anesthetized with pentobarbital and breathing spontaneously, regional splenic blood flow (rSBF) was measured by means of the85Kr(β)-clearance technique after an intraaortic slug injection of the dissolved indicator. In the normal and undisturbed spleen in situ rSBF is linearly related to the mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) within the range of 30–140 mm Hg. Mean rSBF is 0.71 ml/g/min, the mean arterial blood pressure being 105 mm Hg. In normal rats rSBF decreases significantly with increasing body weight or age. After total obstruction of the open circulation by application of rigid spherocytes, mean rSBF is reduced to 0.26 ml/g/min and is independent of the mean arterial blo…
Mathematical Modelling of Local Regulation of Blood Flow by Veno-Arterial Diffusion of Vasoactive Metabolites
1997
It is widely accepted that vasoactive substances which are consumed or produced by tissue metabolism play a role in the adjustment of local perfusion rate to the metabolic needs of the tissue. In order to evoke a response of the vascular system, these substances — in the following for simplicity denoted by “vasodilators” even though oxygen, for example, is a vasoconstrictor — need to get into close contact with the small arterioles which represent the most powerful effectors in perfusion control. On the other hand, tissue sites in which supply with nutrients is most critical (“lethal corners”) and in which a vasodilator signal may be generated earliest, are located hundreds of µm away from …