## Abstract The commonly used size of microsphere for bone blood flow estimation is 15 μm, because it has appeard to be the smallest size that is not subject to significant nonentrapment in bone. Soft‐tissue studies suggest that it is microspheres of 9‐10 μm or less that pass through peripheral tis
Heterogeneity of blood flow in tibial cortical bone: An experimental investigation using microspheres
✍ Scribed by S. M. Willans; Dr. I. D. McCarthy
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 467 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The distribution of tibial blood flow was measured by injecting approximately (600–1000) X 10^3^ 15 μ microspheres, labelled with either tin‐113 (^113^Sn) or cobalt‐57 (^57^Co) into femoral arteries of five mature greyhounds. The diaphyseal cortex, stripped of periosteum and devoid of marrow, was sawn into 40 pieces (10 transverse sections X 4 anatomical quarters/section). Relative deposition densities of the ^113^Sn microspheres in 40 pieces of cortex were found. These values, together with their associated masses, proved, from a statistical point of view, that flow rate heterogeneity was substantial in the diaphysis. In particular, for the diaphyseal cortex, distribution of relative deposition densities (flow rates) in six bones was found to be positively‐skewed with a relative dispersion ((SD/mean) x 100) of ∼40%.
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