scholarly journals Cellular Control of Brain Capillary Blood Flow: In Vivo Imaging Veritas

2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (8) ◽  
pp. 528-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaime Grutzendler ◽  
Maiken Nedergaard
1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (2) ◽  
pp. G310-G320 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Plusczyk ◽  
S. Westermann ◽  
D. Rathgeb ◽  
G. Feifel

With use of in vivo microscopy, pancreatic duct permeability, red blood cell (RBC) velocities, functional capillary density (FCD), and overall changes in capillary blood flow (perfusion index) were estimated after intraductal infusion of sodium taurocholate (0.8 ml, 4%) alone or in combination with systemic administration of cholecystokinin (CCK, 0.3 microg/100 g body wt) or secretin (Sec, 10 microg/100 g body wt). Sodium taurocholate mediated a significant increase in pancreatic duct and capillary permeability within 105 +/- 26 s followed by a transient decrease in RBC velocities and a sustained decrease in FCD, which were paralleled by dramatic flow heterogeneity. Therefore, a significant reduction in overall capillary blood flow was calculated. CCK stimulation aggravated the microcirculatory failure due to a decrease in RBC velocities, which was accompanied by an increase in acinar cellular necrosis. Sec stimulation attenuated microcirculatory failure due to a more moderate reduction of FCD. The enhanced pancreatic duct and capillary permeability, which enables free diffusion of pancreatic digestive enzymes into the parenchyma, is the initiating event in acute biliary pancreatitis, causing microcirculatory failure and tissue damage. The microcirculatory changes are secondary and a propagating factor for the development of acini necrosis. Stimulation with CCK worsened the course of acute biliary pancreatitis.


1993 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 168-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Högström ◽  
P. Rooth ◽  
O. Sunnegårdh ◽  
S.-O. Hietala

An experimental model using in vivo fluorescence microscopy for studies of renal cortical blood flow was tested in 40 mice. The model was suitable for testing a wide variety of hypotheses concerning alterations in renal cortical blood flow, including the possibility of inhomogeneous capillary blood flow distribution in response to i.v. infusions. The experimental model was tested for the effects of i.v. infusion of mannitol (0.3 mol/l). Effects of anesthesia and mechanical kidney fixation on renal cortical blood flow were studied. Neuroleptic analgesia was less hazardous to the animals than pentobarbital. Due to artifacts from respiratory and peristaltic motion, it was not possible to use neuroleptic analgesia without mechanical kidney fixation. A rating scale was designed for evaluating the capillary blood flow. The correlation between repeated ratings by the same observer was 0.806 and between 2 different observers 0.59.


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