1. Intramyocardial oxygen transport by quantitative diffuse reflectance spectroscopy in calves.
- Author
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Tobias Lindbergh, Marcus Larsson, Zolta´n Szabo´, Henrik Casimir-Ahn, and Tomas Stro¨mberg
- Subjects
REFLECTANCE spectroscopy ,PHYSIOLOGICAL transport of oxygen ,MYOCARDIUM ,CALVES ,MYOGLOBIN ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CYTOCHROMES - Abstract
Intramyocardial oxygen transport was assessed during open-chest surgery in calves by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy using a small intramuscular fiber-optic probe. The sum of hemo- and myoglobin tissue fraction and oxygen saturation, the tissue fraction and oxidation of cytochrome aa3, and the tissue fraction of methemoglobin were estimated using a calibrated empirical light transport model. Increasing the oxygen content in the inhaled gas, 21–50–100, in five calves (group A) gave an increasing oxygen saturation of 19±4, 24±5, and 28±8(p<0.001, ANOVA repeated measures design) and mean tissue fractions of 1.6 (cytochrome aa3) and 1.1 (hemo- and myoglobin). Cardiac arrest in two calves gave an oxygen saturation lower than 5. In two calves (group B), a left ventricular assistive device (LVAD pump) was implanted. Oxygen saturation in group B animals increased with LVAD pump speed (p<0.001, ANOVA) and with oxygen content in inhaled gas (p<0.001, ANOVA). The cytochrome aa3 oxidation level was above 96 in both group A and group B calves, including the two cases involving cardiac arrest. In conclusion, the estimated tissue fractions and oxygenation/oxidation levels of the myocardial chromophores during respiratory and hemodynamic provocations were in agreement with previously presented results, demonstrating the potential of the method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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