Measurement of pulmonary edema in intact dogs by transthoracic gamma-ray attenuation
AbstractAbstract
[en] Attenuation of the 122 keV gamma rays of cobalt-57 across the thorax of anesthetized dogs was evaluated as a method for following the time course of lung water changes in acute pulmonary edema induced by either increased microvascular permeability or increased microvascular hydrostatic pressure. The gamma rays traversed the thorax centered on the seventh rib laterally where the lung mass in the beam path was greatest. Calibration measurements in isolated lung lobes demonstrated the high sensitivity and inherent accuracy of the method over a wide range of lung water contents. In control dogs reproducibility averaged +-3%. Increased permeability edema led to large rapid increases in the transthoracic gamma ray attenuation (TGA), while increased pressure caused an immediate, modest increase in TGA (vascular congestion) followed by a slow further increase over 2 h. There was a fairly good correlation between the increase in extravascular lung water and the change in TGA. The method is simple, safe, and noninvasive and appears to be useful for following the time course of lung water accumulation in generalized lung edema in anesthetized animals
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Journal Article
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Journal of Applied Physiology; ISSN 0021-8987; ; v. 47(6); p. 1228-1233
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Descriptors (DEC)
ANIMALS, BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, BODY, CELL CONSTITUENTS, COBALT ISOTOPES, DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES, DISEASES, ELECTRON CAPTURE RADIOISOTOPES, INTERMEDIATE MASS NUCLEI, ISOTOPE APPLICATIONS, ISOTOPES, MAMMALS, MEMBRANES, NUCLEI, ODD-EVEN NUCLEI, ORGANS, PATHOLOGICAL CHANGES, RADIOISOTOPES, RESPIRATORY SYSTEM, SYMPTOMS, VERTEBRATES
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