Département de Neurosciences Fondamentales, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Physiol Meas. 2013 Mar;34(3):N25-40. doi: 10.1088/0967-3334/34/3/N25. Epub 2013 Feb 26.
Human bone blood flow, mean blood speed and the number of moving red blood cells were assessed (in arbitrary units), as a function of time, during one cardiac cycle. The measurements were obtained non-invasively on five volunteers by laser-Doppler flowmetry at large interoptode spacing. The investigated bones included: patella, clavicle, tibial diaphysis and tibial malleolus. As hypothesized, we found that in all bones the number of moving cells remains constant during cardiac cycles. Therefore, we concluded that the pulsatile nature of blood flow must be completely determined by the mean blood speed and not by changes in blood volume (vessels dilation). Based on these results, it is finally demonstrated using a mathematical model (derived from the radiative transport theory) that photoplethysmographic (PPG) pulsations observed by others in the literature, cannot be generated by oscillations in blood oxygen saturation, which is physiologically linked to blood speed. In fact, possible oxygen saturation changes during pulsations decrease the amplitude of PPG pulsations due to specific features of the PPG light source. It is shown that a variation in blood oxygen saturation of 3% may induce a negative change of ∼1% in the PPG signal. It is concluded that PPG pulsations are determined by periodic 'positive' changes of the reduced scattering coefficient of the tissue and/or the absorption coefficient at constant blood volume. No explicit experimental PPG measurements have been performed. As a by-product of this study, an estimation of the arterial pulse wave velocity obtained from the analysis of the blood flow pulsations give a value of 7.8 m s(-1) (95% confidence interval of the sample mean distribution: [6.7, 9.5] m s(-1)), which is perfectly compatible with data in the literature. We hope that this note will contribute to a better understanding of PPG signals and to further develop the domain of the vascular physiology of human bone.
研究人员采用大间隔光栓测量法,对 5 名志愿者进行了非侵入性检测,评估了人体骨骼血液流动情况,包括:髌骨、锁骨、胫骨骨干和胫骨外踝。在一个心动周期内,评估了作为时间函数的平均血流速度和移动红细胞数量。研究人员发现,在所有骨骼中,细胞的移动数量在心动周期内保持不变。因此,研究人员得出结论,血流的脉动性质必须完全由平均血流速度决定,而不是由血管扩张引起的血液量变化决定。基于这些结果,研究人员最后利用数学模型(源自辐射传输理论)证明,文献中其他人观察到的光电容积脉搏波图(PPG)脉动不能由血液氧饱和度的振荡产生,因为氧饱和度与血流速度在生理上是相关的。事实上,由于 PPG 光源的特定特征,脉动过程中血氧饱和度的可能变化会降低 PPG 脉动的幅度。研究表明,血液氧饱和度变化 3%可能会导致 PPG 信号负向变化约 1%。研究人员得出结论,PPG 脉动是由组织的还原散射系数和/或血液体积不变时的吸收系数的周期性“正向”变化决定的。目前尚未进行明确的 PPG 实验测量。作为这项研究的副产品,对血流脉动分析得出的动脉脉搏波速度估计值为 7.8 m/s(样本均值分布的 95%置信区间为 [6.7, 9.5] m/s),与文献中的数据完全一致。研究人员希望这篇说明能够帮助人们更好地理解 PPG 信号,并进一步发展人体骨骼的血管生理学领域。