Stroke, Vol 16, 964-968, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
JB Hazelrig, JH Halsey Jr, EM Wilson and EL Wills
When the 133Xe inhalation method is employed for measuring regional
cerebral blood flow, the arterial 133Xe concentration is usually
approximated by the end-tidal air concentration. However, this
approximation may be invalid in the presence of certain lung pathologies or
when the breathing pattern is irregular. Jaggi and Obrist, using an
intravenous injection of 133Xe, suggested that the counts detected by an
external lung probe could provide an alternative estimate for arterial
blood concentration once the noise produced by 133Xe in superficial tissues
is removed from the signal. A mathematical model, based on hypotheses
similar to theirs is presented here together with a new computational
procedure for removing the noise. Results from normal rest studies on ten
healthy young males indicate that the approximations for arterial blood
concentration obtained from end-tidal air and from corrected lung counts
are not equivalent when 133Xe is administered by inhalation. The
concentration-time curves have different shapes, and these differences are
reflected in blood flow values computed by head channel. However, there is
no effect on comparisons between homologous regions of the left and right
hemispheres.
ARTICLES
Comparison of external lung monitoring with end-tidal air detection using the 133xenon inhalation method
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