Radioactive sucrose, sodium, and water diffusion in cat right ventricle yielded apparent tissue diffusion coefficients of 1.77, 5.13, and 7.39 x 10(-6) cm(2)/s, respectively.
The study determined the apparent tissue diffusion coefficients for sucrose, sodium, and water in cat right ventricular myocardium, showing a reduction to approximately 22-23% of their free diffusion coefficients.
The cumulative fluxes of radioactive sucrose, sodium, and water across a sheet of cat right ventricle were studied simultaneously to obtain the apparent tissue diffusion coefficients for extravascular diffusion at 37°C. The sucrose data fitted the equations for diffusion in tortuous channels in a plane sheet with a tortuosity factor, λ, of 2.11 ± 0.11 (mean ± SE, n = 10). The fit of the earliest data before attainment of steady state was improved by assuming a Gaussian distribution of diffusion path lengths through the extracellular space, but λ was only changed by a few percent. The sucrose diffusion channel contained 0.27 ± 0.03 ml of total tissue water, which is more than measured by others but still less than the expected sucrose space. The steady-state data for sodium agreed with the model for extracellular diffusion using λ and the area available for diffusion for sucrose when sodium equilibration with a dead-end pore volume (presumed to be intracellular) was taken into account. The cumulative flux data for water were monotonic and lacked secondary inflections. Thus the apparent tissue diffusion coefficients for sucrose, sodium, and water were (in 10(−6) cm(2)/s) 1.77 ± 0.23, 5.13 ± 0.68, and 7.39 ± 0.99, respectively, representing a reduction to 23% of the free diffusion coefficient for sucrose and sodium and 22% for water.
Suenson et al. (Fri,) conducted a other in Ventricular myocardium (n=10). Radioactive sucrose, sodium, and water was evaluated on Apparent tissue diffusion coefficients. Radioactive sucrose, sodium, and water diffusion in cat right ventricle yielded apparent tissue diffusion coefficients of 1.77, 5.13, and 7.39 x 10(-6) cm(2)/s, respectively.
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