Title : 
Simultaneous Measurement of Liquid Velocity and Oxygen Tension with Catheter-Tip Electrodes - The Dual Cathode Polarographic Method
         
        
            Author : 
Kim, Tai-Jin ; Firouztale, Edward ; Ultman, James S.
         
        
            Author_Institution : 
Department of Chemical Engineering and the Bioengineering Program, Pennsylvania State University
         
        
        
        
            fDate : 
4/1/1981 12:00:00 AM
         
        
        
        
            Abstract : 
The application of a dual-cathode catheter system to the simultaneous measurement of oxygen tension (pα) and velocity (V) has been studied under conditions similar to those in human arteries. The catheter tip contained a large silver electrode (16 mm2) and a small silver electrode (0.035 mm2) which were connected to a common polarizing power supply and external silver/silver chloride reference anode (774 mm2). The 2 mm diameter catheter was centered in a 6.4 mm diameter tube through which flow of buffered physiologic saline solution at various oxygen tensions from 154 to 736 torr was metered at velocities of 1-67 cm/s. At a fixed velocity, the limiting current outputs from both the small and large cathodes were linear with pα. Membrane-coated catheters exhibited velocity-insensitive outputs from the small cathode whenever V 5 cm/s. The large cathodes were always flow-sensitive, but the degree of sensitivity depended upon the membrane thickness. Experiments with bare large electrodes indicated that the greatest sensitivity possible with the present cathode geometry is a relative current increase of 124 percent over a velocity range of 5-67 cm/s.
         
        
            Keywords : 
Arteries; Catheters; Cathodes; Electrodes; Humans; Oxygen; Polarization; Power supplies; Silver; Velocity measurement; Oxygen; Polarography; Rheology;
         
        
        
            Journal_Title : 
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
         
        
        
        
        
            DOI : 
10.1109/TBME.1981.324802