Stroke, Vol 20, 1716-1723, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
DS DeWitt, PP Fatouros, AO Wist, LM Stewart, HA Kontos, JA Hall, PR Kishore, RL Keenan and A Marmarou
Regional cerebral blood flow was simultaneously determined using the stable
xenon computed tomographic and the radioactive microsphere techniques over
a wide range of blood flow rates (less than 10-greater than 300 ml/100
g/min) in 12 baboons under conditions of normocapnia, hypocapnia, and
hypercapnia. A total of 31 pairs of determinations were made. After
anesthetic and surgical preparation of the baboons, cerebral blood flow was
repeatedly determined using the stable xenon technique during saturation
with 50% xenon in oxygen. Concurrently, cerebral blood flow was determined
before and during xenon administration using 15-microns microspheres. In
Group 1 (n = 7), xenon and microsphere determinations were made repeatedly
during normocapnia. In Group 2 (n = 5), cerebral blood flow was determined
using both techniques in each baboon during hypocapnia (PaCO2 = 20 mm Hg),
normocapnia (PaCO2 = 40 mm Hg), and hypercapnia (PaCO2 = 60 mm Hg). Xenon
and microsphere values in Group 1 were significantly correlated (r = 0.69,
p less than 0.01). In Group 2, values from both techniques also correlated
closely across all levels of PaCO2 (r = 0.92, p less than 0.001). No
significant differences existed between the slopes or y intercepts of the
regression lines for either group and the line of identity. Our data
indicate that the stable xenon technique yields cerebral blood flow values
that correlate well with values determined using radioactive microspheres
across a wide range of cerebral blood flow rates.
ARTICLES
Stable xenon versus radiolabeled microsphere cerebral blood flow measurements in baboons
Department of Surgery, Richard Roland Reynolds Neurosurgical Research Laboratories, Medical College of Virginia, Richmond.
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