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  • Title: Noninvasive measurement of cardiopulmonary blood volume. Evaluation of the centroid method.
    Author: Fouad FM, MacIntyre WJ, Tarazi RC.
    Journal: J Nucl Med; 1981 Mar; 22(3):205-11. PubMed ID: 7009803.
    Abstract:
    Cardiopulmonary blood volume (CPV) and mean pulmonary transit time (MTT) determined by radionuclide measurements (Tc-99m HSA) were compared with values obtained from simultaneous dye-dilution (DD) studies (indocyanine green). The mean transit time was obtained from radionuclide curves by two methods: the "peak-to-peak" time and the interval between the two centroids determined from the right and left-ventricular time-concentration curves. Correlation of dye-dilution MTT and "peak-to-peak" time was significant (r = 0.79, p less than 0.001), but its correlation with centroid-derived values was better (r = 0.86, p less than 0.001). CPV values (using the centroid method for radionuclide technique) correlated significantly with values derived from dye-dilution curves (r = 0.74, p less than 0.001). Discrepancies between the two were greater the more rapid the circulation (r = 0.61, p less than 0.01), suggesting that minor inaccuracies of dye-dilution methods, due to positioning or delay of the system, can become magnified in hyperkinetic conditions. The radionuclide method is simple, repeatable, and noninvasive, and it provides simultaneous evaluation of pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics. Further, calculation of the ratio of cardiopulmonary to total blood volume can be used as an index of overall venous distensibility and relocation of intravascular blood volume.
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