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MEASUREMENTS OF HINDLIMB BLOOD FLOW RECORDED USING DOPPLER ULTRASOUND DURING ADMINISTRATION OF VASOACTIVE AGENTS IN HALOTHANE‐ANESTHETIZED HORSES
Author(s) -
Raisis Anthea L.,
Young Lesley E.,
Meire Hylton B.,
Taylor Polly M.,
Blissitt Karen J.,
Marlin David,
Lekeux Pierre
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
veterinary radiology and ultrasound
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.541
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1740-8261
pISSN - 1058-8183
DOI - 10.1111/j.1740-8261.2000.tb00429.x
Subject(s) - medicine , femoral artery , blood flow , blood pressure , hemodynamics , anesthesia , sodium nitroprusside , phenylephrine , vascular resistance , cardiology , nitric oxide
The purpose of the study was to determine the ability of Doppler ultrasound to detect changes in femoral blood flow during pharmacologic manipulation of arterial blood pressure. Doppler ultrasonography was performed in the femoral vessels of six halothane‐anesthetized horses before and during administration of phenylephrine HC1 and sodium nitroprusside. The time‐averaged mean velocity and volumetric flow were calculated. The contour of the velocity waveform was assessed, and the early diastolic deceleration slope (EDDS) and pulsatility index (PI) were calculated. Administration of phenylephrine HO resulted in increased mean aortic blood pressure (MABP) by 40% (29.3–53.0%). This caused significant decrease in cardiac output (26.8 to 13.5 1/min), femoral arterial velocity (left artery 7.20 to 4.00 cm/s; right artery 5.01 to 3.39 cm/s) and volumetric flow (left artery 556 to 221 ml/min; right artery 397 to 193 ml/min) in the femoral vessels and significant increase in systemic vascular resistance (163 to 433 dyn‐s/cm s ), EDDS (la: 285 to 468: ra: 250 to 481) and PI (la: 9.38 to 20.4; ra 17.1 to 29.1). Administration of sodium nitroprusside resulted in a decreased MABP of 27.2% (22.5–33%). This increased cardiac output (20.8 to 32.4 L/min), however, no significant changes were observed in femoral blood flow. Despite obvious changes in the waveform contour, no significant change occurred in EDDS or PL These results suggest that Doppler ultrasound may be useful for measuring femoral blood flow in anesthetized horses. However, waveform analysis appears to be limited when multiple changes occur in central and peripheral haemodynamics.