Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine 62 (2000) 115 – 125
Validation of automated spectrofluroimetry for measurement
of regional organ perfusion using fluorescent microspheres
Carmel Schimmel
a,
*, David Frazer
a
, Stuart R. Huckins
c
,
Robb W. Glenny
a,b
a
Diision of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Department of Medicine, Uniersity of Washington School of Medicine, Box 356522,
Seattle, WA 98195, USA
b
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Uniersity of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA 98195, USA
c
Perkin Elmer Bodenseewerk GmbH, Postfach 101761, D-88647 Uberlingen, Germany
Received 7 September 1999; received in revised form 1 October 1999; accepted 5 January 2000
Abstract
The fluorescent microsphere (FM) method for determination of regional organ blood flow is labor intensive,
requiring processing of 100 s to 1000 s of samples per organ. To save time and reduce handling errors, we developed
an automated fluorescence analysis system by interfacing a commercially available spectrofluorimeter and sample
delivery unit to a PC, operated by a Windows95
®
-based program, WINFAC. WINFAC allows versatile analysis
setup and instrument control for fluorescent intensity acquisition at fixed wavelengths or by synchronous scanning.
Data is presented on screen, in real-time, and stored in text format. Reference analyses are performed at specified
intervals and the coefficient of variation is continuously updated to monitor instrument performance. The automated
system was validated against radioactive microspheres (RM) for lung perfusion in a pig and sheep and evaluated for
analysis reproducibility. Fluorescent and radioactive microspheres were delivered by simultaneous injection into a
femoral vein. Lungs were excised, flushed, dried at total lung capacity, and cubed into 2cm
3
pieces (n =833 and
1560, pig and sheep, respectively). Radioactive count rates were determined for each lung piece (corrected for decay,
background and spillover). Fluorescent dyes were extracted in solvent and intensities were determined at fixed
wavelengths, using the automated spectrofluorimeter (corrected for background and spillover). Multi-color reference
solutions were measured every 50 samples to monitor instrument reproducibility. Blood flow estimates for each piece
determined by RM and FM methods were highly correlated: R
2
=0.98 0.017, Slopes =1.00 0.007 and Inter-
cepts =0.00 0.006 (mean SD). The CV of repeat reference analyses was 0.71% 0.16, a 30% to 50% reduction
relative to manual analysis. Automated spectrofluorimetry reduces measurement errors and is a reliable and time
saving advancement. With this technology, use of FM to measure regional lung perfusion approaches the ease and
accuracy of the RM method. © 2000 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Automated spectrofluorimetry; Fluorescent microspheres; Regional blood flow; Pulmonary perfusion
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* Corresponding author. Tel.: +1-206-6169022.
0169-2607/00/$ - see front matter © 2000 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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