Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Esophagus Burst Pressure Call for help

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Esophagus Burst Pressure Call for help

    Hello,

    My name is Amit Bhrany, and I am conducting burst pressure studies on rat
    esophagi. I insert a 22-guage catheter into the lumen of an approximately
    10-mm segment of rat esophagi. I then affix the proximal end of the
    esophagus to catheter via a suture and close the distal end in the same
    manner. I infuse saline at a constant rate into the esophagus until it
    bursts. My main goal is to determine the bursting pressure of each
    esophageal segment.

    I have two questions. The first is that when I tie off the esophagi, the
    length of the segments are not always constant. They range from 7-13 mm in
    length. I would think that as long as I am only concerned with the burst
    pressure of the walls of the esophagus in a closed system, that the
    differences in length should not affect the actual burst pressure. Is the
    preceding really true, or can I not compare burst pressures of esophagi with
    differing lengths?

    My second question stems from the fact that the catheter is not always
    inserted the exact same length into the lumen of the esophagus. When the
    esophagus bursts, the wall is not touching the catheter, but is it safe to
    assume that the amount of volume the catheter takes up does not affect the
    measurement?

    I thank you all for your consideration and would appreciate any assistance
    you could provide.

    Sincerely,


    Amit


    --
    Amit Bhrany M.D.
    Department of Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery
    University of Washington
    Box 356515
    Seattle, WA 98195

    abhrany@u.washington.edu
    (206) 221-5828: office
    (206) 340-7869: pager

    ---------------------------------------------------------------
    To unsubscribe send SIGNOFF BIOMCH-L to LISTSERV@nic.surfnet.nl
    For information and archives: http://isb.ri.ccf.org/biomch-l
    ---------------------------------------------------------------
Working...
X