Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree.
Evaluation of blood supply of different organs relies on labeling blood with a suitable tracer. The tracer kinetics is linear: Tracer concentration at an observation site is a linear response to an input somewhere upstream the arterial flow. The corresponding impulse response functions are currently...
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2014-01-01
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doaj-b6addc370b4b4b9f8040db226109ffb02020-11-25T02:15:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e10923010.1371/journal.pone.0109230Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree.Elias KellnerPeter GallMatthias GüntherMarco ReisertIrina MaderRoman FleysherValerij G KiselevEvaluation of blood supply of different organs relies on labeling blood with a suitable tracer. The tracer kinetics is linear: Tracer concentration at an observation site is a linear response to an input somewhere upstream the arterial flow. The corresponding impulse response functions are currently treated empirically without incorporating the relation to the vascular morphology of an organ. In this work we address this relation for the first time. We demonstrate that the form of the response function in the entire arterial tree is reduced to that of individual vessel segments under approximation of good blood mixing at vessel bifurcations. The resulting expression simplifies significantly when the geometric scaling of the vascular tree is taken into account. This suggests a new way to access the vascular morphology in vivo using experimentally determined response functions. However, it is an ill-posed inverse problem as demonstrated by an example using measured arterial spin labeling in large brain arteries. We further analyze transport in individual vessel segments and demonstrate that experimentally accessible tracer concentration in vessel segments depends on the measurement principle. Explicit expressions for the response functions are obtained for the major middle part of the arterial tree in which the blood flow in individual vessel segments can be treated as laminar. When applied to the analysis of regional cerebral blood flow measurements for which the necessary arterial input is evaluated in the carotid arteries, present theory predicts about 20% underestimation, which is in agreement with recent experimental data.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4192126?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Elias Kellner Peter Gall Matthias Günther Marco Reisert Irina Mader Roman Fleysher Valerij G Kiselev |
spellingShingle |
Elias Kellner Peter Gall Matthias Günther Marco Reisert Irina Mader Roman Fleysher Valerij G Kiselev Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Elias Kellner Peter Gall Matthias Günther Marco Reisert Irina Mader Roman Fleysher Valerij G Kiselev |
author_sort |
Elias Kellner |
title |
Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. |
title_short |
Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. |
title_full |
Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. |
title_fullStr |
Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. |
title_sort |
blood tracer kinetics in the arterial tree. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
Evaluation of blood supply of different organs relies on labeling blood with a suitable tracer. The tracer kinetics is linear: Tracer concentration at an observation site is a linear response to an input somewhere upstream the arterial flow. The corresponding impulse response functions are currently treated empirically without incorporating the relation to the vascular morphology of an organ. In this work we address this relation for the first time. We demonstrate that the form of the response function in the entire arterial tree is reduced to that of individual vessel segments under approximation of good blood mixing at vessel bifurcations. The resulting expression simplifies significantly when the geometric scaling of the vascular tree is taken into account. This suggests a new way to access the vascular morphology in vivo using experimentally determined response functions. However, it is an ill-posed inverse problem as demonstrated by an example using measured arterial spin labeling in large brain arteries. We further analyze transport in individual vessel segments and demonstrate that experimentally accessible tracer concentration in vessel segments depends on the measurement principle. Explicit expressions for the response functions are obtained for the major middle part of the arterial tree in which the blood flow in individual vessel segments can be treated as laminar. When applied to the analysis of regional cerebral blood flow measurements for which the necessary arterial input is evaluated in the carotid arteries, present theory predicts about 20% underestimation, which is in agreement with recent experimental data. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4192126?pdf=render |
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