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Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model

OBJECTIVE: The study aim was to evaluate a small low-field NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) scanner, the NMR-MOUSE(®), for detecting changes in intestinal diffusion under different (patho-) physiological perfusion states. METHODS: Laparotomy was performed on 8 female landrace pigs (body weight 70±6...

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Autores principales: Keschenau, Paula R., Klingel, Hanna, Reuter, Silke, Foldenauer, Ann Christina, Vieß, Jochen, Weidener, Dennis, Andruszkow, Julia, Bluemich, Bernhard, Tolba, René, Jacobs, Michael J., Kalder, Johannes
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6214547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30388139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206697
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author Keschenau, Paula R.
Klingel, Hanna
Reuter, Silke
Foldenauer, Ann Christina
Vieß, Jochen
Weidener, Dennis
Andruszkow, Julia
Bluemich, Bernhard
Tolba, René
Jacobs, Michael J.
Kalder, Johannes
author_facet Keschenau, Paula R.
Klingel, Hanna
Reuter, Silke
Foldenauer, Ann Christina
Vieß, Jochen
Weidener, Dennis
Andruszkow, Julia
Bluemich, Bernhard
Tolba, René
Jacobs, Michael J.
Kalder, Johannes
author_sort Keschenau, Paula R.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The study aim was to evaluate a small low-field NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) scanner, the NMR-MOUSE(®), for detecting changes in intestinal diffusion under different (patho-) physiological perfusion states. METHODS: Laparotomy was performed on 8 female landrace pigs (body weight 70±6 kg) and the feeding vessels of several intestinal loops were dissected. Successively, the intestinal loops were examined using O2C (oxygen to see, LEA Medizintechnik GmbH, Giessen, Germany) for microcirculatory monitoring and the NMR-MOUSE(®) for diffusion measurement (fast and slow components). On each loop the baseline measurement (physiological perfusion) was followed by one of the following main procedures: method 1 –ischemia; method 2 –flow reduction; method 3 –intraluminal glucose followed by ischemia; method 4 –intraluminal glucose followed by flow reduction. Additionally, standard perioperative monitoring (blood pressure, ECG, blood gas analyses) and histological assessment of intestinal biopsies was performed. RESULTS: There was no statistical overall time and method effect in the NMR-MOUSE measurement (fast component: p(time) = 0.6368, p(method) = 0.9766, slow component: p(time) = 0.8216, p(method) = 0.7863). Yet, the fast component of the NMR-MOUSE measurement showed contrary trends during ischemia (increase) versus flow reduction (decrease). The slow-to-fast diffusion ratio shifted slightly towards slow diffusion during flow reduction. The O2C measurement showed a significant decrease of oxygen saturation and microcirculatory blood flow during ischemia and flow reduction (p < .0001). The local microcirculatory blood amount (rHb) showed a significant mucosal increase (p(Clamping(method 1)) = 0.0007, p(Clamping(method 3)) = 0.0119), but a serosal decrease (p(Clamping(method 1)) = 0.0119, p(Clamping(method 3)) = 0.0078) during ischemia. The histopathological damage was significantly higher with increasing experimental duration and at the end of methods 3 and 4 (p < .0001,Fisher-test). CONCLUSION: Monitoring intestinal diffusion changes due to different perfusion states using the NMR-MOUSE is feasible under experimental conditions. Despite the lack of statistical significance, this technique reflects perfusion changes and therefore seems promising for the evaluation of different intestinal perfusion states in the future. Beforehand however, an optimization of this technology, including the optimization of the penetration depth, as well as further validation studies under physiological conditions and including older animals are required.
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spelling pubmed-62145472018-11-19 Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model Keschenau, Paula R. Klingel, Hanna Reuter, Silke Foldenauer, Ann Christina Vieß, Jochen Weidener, Dennis Andruszkow, Julia Bluemich, Bernhard Tolba, René Jacobs, Michael J. Kalder, Johannes PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: The study aim was to evaluate a small low-field NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) scanner, the NMR-MOUSE(®), for detecting changes in intestinal diffusion under different (patho-) physiological perfusion states. METHODS: Laparotomy was performed on 8 female landrace pigs (body weight 70±6 kg) and the feeding vessels of several intestinal loops were dissected. Successively, the intestinal loops were examined using O2C (oxygen to see, LEA Medizintechnik GmbH, Giessen, Germany) for microcirculatory monitoring and the NMR-MOUSE(®) for diffusion measurement (fast and slow components). On each loop the baseline measurement (physiological perfusion) was followed by one of the following main procedures: method 1 –ischemia; method 2 –flow reduction; method 3 –intraluminal glucose followed by ischemia; method 4 –intraluminal glucose followed by flow reduction. Additionally, standard perioperative monitoring (blood pressure, ECG, blood gas analyses) and histological assessment of intestinal biopsies was performed. RESULTS: There was no statistical overall time and method effect in the NMR-MOUSE measurement (fast component: p(time) = 0.6368, p(method) = 0.9766, slow component: p(time) = 0.8216, p(method) = 0.7863). Yet, the fast component of the NMR-MOUSE measurement showed contrary trends during ischemia (increase) versus flow reduction (decrease). The slow-to-fast diffusion ratio shifted slightly towards slow diffusion during flow reduction. The O2C measurement showed a significant decrease of oxygen saturation and microcirculatory blood flow during ischemia and flow reduction (p < .0001). The local microcirculatory blood amount (rHb) showed a significant mucosal increase (p(Clamping(method 1)) = 0.0007, p(Clamping(method 3)) = 0.0119), but a serosal decrease (p(Clamping(method 1)) = 0.0119, p(Clamping(method 3)) = 0.0078) during ischemia. The histopathological damage was significantly higher with increasing experimental duration and at the end of methods 3 and 4 (p < .0001,Fisher-test). CONCLUSION: Monitoring intestinal diffusion changes due to different perfusion states using the NMR-MOUSE is feasible under experimental conditions. Despite the lack of statistical significance, this technique reflects perfusion changes and therefore seems promising for the evaluation of different intestinal perfusion states in the future. Beforehand however, an optimization of this technology, including the optimization of the penetration depth, as well as further validation studies under physiological conditions and including older animals are required. Public Library of Science 2018-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6214547/ /pubmed/30388139 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206697 Text en © 2018 Keschenau et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Keschenau, Paula R.
Klingel, Hanna
Reuter, Silke
Foldenauer, Ann Christina
Vieß, Jochen
Weidener, Dennis
Andruszkow, Julia
Bluemich, Bernhard
Tolba, René
Jacobs, Michael J.
Kalder, Johannes
Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
title Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
title_full Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
title_fullStr Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
title_short Evaluation of the NMR-MOUSE as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
title_sort evaluation of the nmr-mouse as a new method for continuous functional monitoring of the small intestine during different perfusion states in a porcine model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6214547/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30388139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206697
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