In
physiology, 'perfusion' is the process of nutritive delivery of
arterial blood to a
capillary bed in the
biological tissue.
Tests of adequate perfusion are a part of patient
triage performed by
medical or emergency personnel in a
mass casualty incident.
Calculation
Perfusion ("F") can be measured with the following formula, where Pa is
mean arterial pressure, Pv is
mean venous pressure, and R is
vascular resistance:
[1]
The term "Pa - Pv" is sometimes presented as "ΔP", for the change in pressure.
[2]
The terms "perfusion" and "perfusion pressure" are sometimes used interchangably, but the equation should make clear that resistance can have an effect on the perfusion, but not on the perfusion pressure.
Overperfusion and underperfusion
The terms "overperfusion" and "underperfusion" are measured relative to the average level of perfusion across all tissues in an individual body, and the terms should not be confused with
hypoperfusion and "hyperperfusion", which measure the perfusion level to the tissue's current need.
Tissues like the
skin are considered overperfused and receive more blood than would be expected to meet the metabolic needs of the tissue. In the case of the skin, extra blood flow is used for
thermoregulation. In addition to delivering
oxygen, the blood helps
dissipate heat by redirecting warm blood close to the surface where it can cool the body through the
sweating and
thermal radiation.
Measurement using fMRI
Two main categories of
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) techniques can be used to measure tissue perfusion
in vivo.
★ The first is based on the use of injected
contrast agent that changes the
magnetic susceptibility of blood and thereby the MR signal which is repeatedly measured during
bolus passage.
★ The other category is based on
arterial spin labeling (ASL), where arterial blood is
magnetically tagged before it enters into the tissue of interest and the amount of labeling is measured and compared to a control recording obtained without spin labeling.
See also
★
Reperfusion injury
References
1. Cardiovascular Physiology Concepts Richard E. Klabunde
2. - "Renal Perfusion Pressure and Vascular Resistance"
External links
★
Perfusion Protocol (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)