DocumentCode
1467813
Title
An in vitro study of the effects of Doppler angle, fibrinogen, and hematocrit on ultrasonic Doppler power
Author
Wu, Shih-Jeh ; Shung, K. Kirk
Author_Institution
CVD Corp., Irvine, CA, USA
Volume
46
Issue
1
fYear
1999
Firstpage
197
Lastpage
204
Abstract
For a better understanding of the relationship between the Doppler power and erythrocyte aggregation of whole blood under steady flow in a conduit, the effects of Doppler angle, fibrinogen concentration, and hematocrit were investigated in a mock flow loop. The results show that, at a mean shear rate of 102 s/sup -1/, there was minimal angular dependence; but at a mean shear rate of 52 s/sup -1/, there was a weak angular dependence as the Doppler angle was varied from 40/spl deg/ to 70/spl deg/. These results suggest that there was, perhaps, no or little alignment of the red cell aggregates at high shear rates. The Doppler power was found to increase nonlinearly as the fibrinogen concentration was increased; and the effect of other plasma proteins on red cell aggregation may not be negligible, although fibrinogen is the dominant factor. The results show that the variation of the Doppler power over the lumen is hematocrit dependent for hematocrits below 26%.
Keywords
Doppler measurement; biomedical ultrasonics; cellular biophysics; haemodynamics; proteins; Doppler angle; erythrocyte aggregation; fibrinogen; hematocrit; in vitro measurement; plasma protein; red cell; shear flow; ultrasonic Doppler power; whole blood; Backscatter; Hemodynamics; In vitro; In vivo; Kirk field collapse effect; Plasmas; Proteins; Pulse measurements; Red blood cells;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-3010
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/58.741533
Filename
741533
Link To Document