The measurement of limb blood flow using technetium-labelled red blood cells
- 1 May 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 59 (701) , 493-497
- https://doi.org/10.1259/0007-1285-59-701-493
Abstract
A method for measuring blood flow below the knee during reactive hyperaemia induced by 3 min of arterial occlusion has been developed. Subjects are positioned with lower limbs within the field of view of a gamma camera and pneumatic cuffs are placed below the knees to isolate the blood and induce a hyperaemic response. The remaining blood pool is labelled with 99Tcm-labelled red cells. Blood flows have been derived from the initial gradients of time-activity curves and from equilibrium blood sampling. The technique has been validated using a tissue-equivalent leg phantom and peristaltic pump. The method has been applied to a small group of patients with peripheral vascular disease and to normal controls. The mean value (.+-. SD) of limb perfusion for normal controls was found to be 16.4 .+-. 3.0 ml/100 ml/min and for patients with intermittent claudication was 5.1 .+-. 2.6 ml/100 ml/min. Flow measurements are found to correlate with clinical findings and with symptoms. Reproducibility (established by repeated measurements) is high. The method is well tolerated even by patients suffering from rest pain.Keywords
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