1052 THE RELIABILITY OF STRAIN GAUGE VENOUS OCCLUSION PLETHYSMOGRAPHY MEASUREMENTOF LIMB BLOOD FLOW

1994 ◽  
Vol 26 (Supplement) ◽  
pp. S187
Author(s):  
N. R. Morris ◽  
G. C. Gass
2005 ◽  
Vol 98 (2) ◽  
pp. 762-763 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Gamble

Venous occlusion plethysmography is a simple but elegant technique that has contributed to almost every major area of vascular biology in humans. The general principles of plethysmography were appreciated by the late 1800s, and the application of these principles to measure limb blood flow occurred in the early 1900s. Plethysmography has been instrumental in studying the role of the autonomic nervous system in regulating limb blood flow in humans and important in studying the vasodilator responses to exercise, reactive hyperemia, body heating, and mental stress. It has also been the technique of choice to study how human blood vessels respond to a variety of exogenously administered vasodilators and vasoconstrictors, especially those that act on various autonomic and adrenergic receptors. In recent years, plethysmography has been exploited to study the role of the vascular endothelium in health and disease. Venous occlusion plethysmography is likely to continue to play an important role as investigators seek to understand the physiological significance of newly identified vasoactive factors and how genetic polymorphisms affect the cardiovascular system in humans.


1983 ◽  
Vol 22 (04) ◽  
pp. 204-209
Author(s):  
P. Gizdulich ◽  
M. Mlchelutti

Strain gauge venous occlusion plethysmography continues to be employed for peripheral muscular blood flow measurements, even though its reliability is dubious.We have already studied reproducibility for short-term (several minutes) and for long-term (one or two days) measurements. Our present aim is to analyze medium-term (several hours) reproducibility, keeping in mind the application of this technique in pharmacological experimentation.We used an analysis of variance with repeated measurements over 4 hours in 24 healthy subjects, considering the following variation factors: venous occlusion pressure (vop); muscular activity; the sampling interval. Two levels were assigned to each factor: 30 or 50 mmHg for the vop, yes or no for the muscular activity and 5 or 20 minutes for the sampling interval.We verified (p <.01) a mean decreasing trend. After an initial 15% increase, values decreased to 85% of the initial value. The trend appears to be modified only by vop. As for the mean value, independently from the trend, we verified that it is significantly (p < .05) modified by muscular activity—as expected—and by the sampling time interval. The statistical analysis excludes trend shape dependence on different metabolic requirements due to the duration of the experiment.


2003 ◽  
Vol 104 (6) ◽  
pp. 599-605 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lennart JORFELDT ◽  
Torbjörn VEDUNG ◽  
Elisabeth FORSSTRÖM ◽  
Jan HENRIKSSON

Blood flow determinations by venous occlusion plethysmography applying the strain-gauge technique are frequently used. A problem with the strain-gauge technique is that the relationship between venous volume and transmural pressure is not linear and, furthermore, changes with the sympathetic tone. The present study tests the hypothesis that these factors lead to a redistribution of venous blood, which may impair the accuracy of the technique. The relative volume expansion rates of four leg segments were studied with the leg in different positions and at disparate temperatures, thereby inducing varying venous pressures and sympathetic tone (n=6). With elevated leg and relaxed veins (at 50 °C), the distal thigh showed a relatively low expansion rate (25.8±4.5 ml·min-1·l-1), whereas values in the calf segments were higher (34.5–39.0 ml·min-1·l-1). With lower initial transmural pressure, calf segments can increase their volume much more during occlusion compared with the distal thigh. In a higher transmural pressure region (lowered leg), the difference in compliance between limb segments is less. In this case, compliance and volume expansion rate was higher in the distal thigh (14.2, 13.5 and 22.2 ml·min-1·l-1 at 10, 20 and 50 °C respectively) than in the calf segments (for the distal calf: 6.4, 7.7 and 16.2 ml·min-1·l-1 respectively). There was a significant interaction (P<0.001) between temperature and leg position, indicating a higher degree of sympathetic vasoactivity in the calf. It is concluded that blood flow determination by strain-gauge plethysmography is less accurate, due to a potential redistribution of the venous blood. Therefore possible influences of variations in sympathetic tone and venous pressure must be considered even in intra-individual comparisons, especially in interventional studies.


2001 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 2431-2441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Joyner ◽  
Niki M. Dietz ◽  
John T. Shepherd

Venous occlusion plethysmography is a simple but elegant technique that has contributed to almost every major area of vascular biology in humans. The general principles of plethysmography were appreciated by the late 1800s, and the application of these principles to measure limb blood flow occurred in the early 1900s. Plethysmography has been instrumental in studying the role of the autonomic nervous system in regulating limb blood flow in humans and important in studying the vasodilator responses to exercise, reactive hyperemia, body heating, and mental stress. It has also been the technique of choice to study how human blood vessels respond to a variety of exogenously administered vasodilators and vasoconstrictors, especially those that act on various autonomic and adrenergic receptors. In recent years, plethysmography has been exploited to study the role of the vascular endothelium in health and disease. Venous occlusion plethysmography is likely to continue to play an important role as investigators seek to understand the physiological significance of newly identified vasoactive factors and how genetic polymorphisms affect the cardiovascular system in humans.


1986 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 1210-1216
Author(s):  
G. L. Brengelmann ◽  
M. Savage

Strain gauges employed in plethysmography for determination of limb blood flow tend to counter the expansion of the limb during venous occlusion. Traditionally a mechanical calibration is performed in situ to compensate for tissue compressibility. Greenfield, Whitney, and Mowbray stated that, otherwise, large errors would result (Br. Med. Bull. 19: 101–109, 1963). Nonetheless, not all of the recent reports on skin blood flow in humans have been based on a calibration procedure that corrects for tissue compressibility. To evaluate the significance of this problem, we developed a new strain-gauge holder that made possible frequent, reproducible, stretching of a single-strand Whitney gauge in situ. We compared the apparent sensitivity thus obtained to electrical or bench mechanical determinations. We independently determined tissue compressibility by recording limb circumference as tension in a circumferential tube was varied. Both techniques showed that tissue compressibility is a small source of error (5%) and that compressibility decreases during occlusion. Therefore the cumbersome holder and potential artifacts associated with the traditional technique need not be tolerated. We also investigated the consequences of nonuniform tension distribution and temperature changes; practical considerations for dealing with these are discussed.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 248-256
Author(s):  
William F. Powers ◽  
Paul R. Swyer

Stimulated blood flow was measured in the legs of 28 infants who had undergone umbilical arterial catheterization in the neonatal period. Catheter tips were positioned in the region of the aortic bifurcation, and only an isotonic saline/dextrose solution was continuously pumped through the catheter. The catheters were in place for an average of 58.3 hours (range, 4 to 144), and the infants were studied between 29 and 135 days of age (mean, 67 days). Blood flow in both legs was measured simultaneously by venous occlusion plethysmography using a mercury-in-rubber strain gauge. Analysis of peak stimulated blood flow in each leg and simultaneous flow in the opposite leg showed no difference between flow in the leg whose iliac artery had been catheterized in the neonatal period and flow in the opposite leg (paired t-test = 0.17; P &gt; .50). No chronic, subclinical flow deficiencies of umbilical arterial catheterization were demonstrable. We see no new reason to curtail the judicious use of the umbilical artery catheter.


2007 ◽  
Vol 103 (3) ◽  
pp. 1070-1077 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kooijman ◽  
M. de Hoog ◽  
G. A. Rongen ◽  
H. J. M. van Kuppevelt ◽  
P. Smits ◽  
...  

Local vasoconstriction plays an important role in maintaining blood pressure in spinal cord-injured individuals (SCI). We aimed to unravel the mechanisms of local vasoconstriction [venoarteriolar reflex (VAR) and myogenic response] using both limb dependency and cuff inflation in SCI and compare these with control subjects. Limb blood flow was measured in 11 male SCI (age: 24–55 yr old) and 9 male controls (age: 23–56 yr old) using venous occlusion plethysmography in forearm and calf during three levels of 1) limb dependency, and 2) cuff inflation. During limb dependency, vasoconstriction relies on both the VAR and the myogenic response. During cuff inflation, the decrease in blood flow is caused by the VAR and by a decrease in arteriovenous pressure difference, whereas the myogenic response does not play a role. At the highest level of leg dependency, the percent increase in calf vascular resistance (mean arterial pressure/calf blood flow) was more pronounced in SCI than in controls (SCI 186 ± 53%; controls 51 ± 17%; P = 0.032). In contrast, during cuff inflation, no differences were found between SCI and controls (SCI 17 ± 17%; controls 14 ± 10%). Percent changes in forearm vascular resistance in response to either forearm dependency or forearm cuff inflation were equal in both groups. Thus local vasoconstriction during dependency of the paralyzed leg in SCI is enhanced. The contribution of the VAR to local vasoconstriction does not differ between the groups, since no differences between groups existed for cuff inflation. Therefore, the augmented local vasoconstriction in SCI during leg dependency relies, most likely, on the myogenic response.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document