Helix Exams

Date Submitted: 12/09/07
Hits: 57
Rating: 00000 0/5 based on 0 votes

Measuring Forearm Blood Flow and Interpreting the Responses to Drugs and Mediators



Added by Meagan

Description: Venous occlusion plethysmography has been widely used to study forearm blood flow. The principle of the technique is straightforward: the rate of swelling of the forearm during occlusion of venous return is used to assess the rate of arterial inflow. This article describes venous occlusion plethysmography, discusses the presentation and analysis of data (dose of drug or concentration? forearm blood flow or resistance?), and highlights certain potential problems and limitations of the technique as a means of studying disease states.

Read the Complete Article



Similar content:
A Noninvasive Computerized Tail-Cuff System for Measuring Blood Pressure in Mice, in Hypertension
Blood Pressure Drugs May Fight Lung Cancer, in Prostate Cancer
Aging Progressively Impairs Endothelium-Dependent Vasodilation in Forearm Resistance Vessels of Humans, in Hypertension
Blood Marker Could Point to Alzheimer's Risk, in Alzheimers
Gene Holds Key to Blood Stem Cells, in Leukemia

Post Comment
Your Name:

Title


Comment You may use Posting Codes in your message.

Security Image:
Type the letters and numbers shown. (This is to prevent automated submissions.)

Contact the Administration

Site Map