OBSERVATIONS ON A NEW NON‐INVASIVE MONITOR OF SKIN BLOOD FLOW
- 1 May 1989
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology
- Vol. 16 (5) , 403-415
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1681.1989.tb01578.x
Abstract
1. A 'tissue perfusion monitor' (TPM) to non-invasively provide an index of skin blood flow (SkBF) has been developed; it employs photoelectric plethysmographic principles to measure changes in the nett flux of red blood cells in superficial microvasculature. 2. The 'tissue perfusion index' (TPI) varies in proportion to SkBF, provided local haemoglobin concentration does not change significantly. TPI of humans and experimental animals has been shown to indicate reliably, well established phenomena such as decreased SkBF in response to mechanical restriction, cold or Valsalva's manoeuvre, or increased SkBF in response to heat, acetylcholine, sodium nitrite or local nerve blockade. 3. SkBF in sheep was varied between 1 and 156 mL/100g per min as measured with radioactive microspheres. Simultaneous measurements were made using the TPM and four laser-Doppler instruments. The TPI yielded a correlation coefficient of 0.938, and when data were expressed as percentage change, the regression line did not differ significantly from the line of identity and the root-mean-square-error was 6.2%. Data for the laser-Doppler indices of SkBF were, respectively, 0.549-0.786, highly significant deviations in slopes, and 13.6-16.7%. 4. Thus, the TPI is a reliable index of changes in SkBF. Compared with some other available instruments, the TPM is more precise; it is also less sensitive to movement artefact, can be completely portable by battery operation, probes can be multiplexed to a single meter and it is likely to be much less expensive than current lasers. 5. Applications include, for example, experimental investigations of SkBF in man and animals, clinical uses such as evaluation of the efficacy of regional nerve blockade or of circulatory restitution after reconstructive surgery, and clinical tests of neurovascular function.Keywords
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