학술논문

A novel device for measuring the effect of cholesterol on the release of oxygen from red blood cells
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings of the 22nd Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (Cat. No.00CH37143) Engineering in medicine and biology Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2000. Proceedings of the 22nd Annual International Conference of the IEEE. 4:2579-2589 vol.4 2000
Subject
Bioengineering
Oxygen
Red blood cells
Biomembranes
Myocardium
Stress
Cells (biology)
Testing
Plasmas
Shape measurement
Equations
Language
ISSN
1094-687X
Abstract
A novel method has been devised to measure the effect of cholesterol on the release of oxygen (O/sub 2/) from the red blood cell (RBC) into a tailored environment, which can be made to mimic myocardial tissue. Cholesterol affects the cell membrane of RBCs and thus the release of O/sub 2/ into tissue. While this is true of all tissue, the myocardium is especially sensitive because of its critical nature, high O/sub 2/ requirements, and the shortness of time that arterial blood spends in the muscle. Calculations are presented that show that the release time for O/sub 2/ from RBCs is close to the residence time of the RBC in the coronary system. Sequential measurements of blood oxygen saturation (SO/sub 2/) are made when oxygenated blood is subjected to conditions similar to the myocardium. The natural logarithm of the relative value of the SO/sub 2/ at time t compared to the initial value of the SO/sub 2/ can be fitted to a straight line whose slope is proportional to the parameters of the RBC membrane, the sample size, the hematocrit and the diffusion parameters of the apparatus. This value is used to estimate the effect of cholesterol lowering treatments on O/sub 2/ release. This test will serve as a valuable adjunct to or replacement for stress tests in the evaluation of coronary artery disease, especially in patients whose physical condition make standard stress testing painful or risky.