December


We are pleased to present you with the following topics in this issue:

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Research Application News

Blood Flow Measurement During Exercise

Quantitative blood flow data in the conscious animal during exercise is a powerful tool in the discipline of exercise physiology.  Researchers studying the physiology of various conditions which alter systemic blood flow and distribution such as exercise, aging, heart failure, and circulatory compromise measure blood flow in conscious animal models during treadmill exercise. Treadmill studies have been performed in large animal models such as sheep, calves, pigs and dogs where they have been trained to walk or run on a treadmill much like people exercising or in a medical examination stress test.

Large Animal Models

Experts rely on Transonic Systems’ implantable flowprobes for such important measurements as cardiac output, hindlimb blood flow, carotid and renal arterial flows to understand the underlying mechanisms of pressor response, peripheral vasoconstriction, and muscle metaboreflex under the stress of mild to moderate exercise. Multiple flowprobes may be implanted on the ascending aorta and peripheral vessels. The leads are exteriorized with a skin button or small connector for tether attachment during recordings. Leads are protected by spring sheaths or other deterrents. Animals, trained on the treadmill, are accustomed to this routine monitoring.  Transonic ultrasonic flowprobes are compatible with telemetric pressure recording devices such as Transoma/DSI® and ultrasonic sonomicrometry for measuring ventricular contractility by Sonometrics, Inc.®

The following studies report the use of integrated instrumentation with four flowprobes implanted in each subject:

Impaired muscle metaboreflex-induced increases in ventricular function in heart failure.

Heart failure alters the strength and mechanisms of arterial baroreflex pressor responses during dynamic exercise.

Small Animal Models

Blood flow studies during exercise are not limited to larger animal species.  Studies have been performed in rats and are now even possible in the mouse to further explore mechanisms in genetic knockout models.  The mice are recovered from flowprobe implantation and similarly tethered for measurements during exercise on a small treadmill.  Researchers at Wake Forest University Health Sciences are now performing separate measurements of cardiac output, renal blood flow and femoral blood flow in subjects during exercise and after treatment with L-NAME.  Their experimental set-up is fully described in the video - Femoral Blood Flow Measurement in the Mouse During Exercise.

Dynamic beat-to-beat data from Transonic Systems flowprobes is comparable in quality and resolution whether the vessel is a 10 mm diameter terminal aorta in a dog or a 0.4 mm diameter femoral artery in a mouse.

For more information on exercise physiology applications please contact Margo Sosa.

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Product Updates

Measuring Femoral Blood Flow in Mice With Transonic Nanoprobes

One of the smallest vessels instrumented for flow is the mouse femoral artery which measures 0.4 mm diameter. Dr. Michael Callahan, Wake Forest University Health Sciences explains the challenges of making stable measurements in acute protocols, then wows us with femoral flow data from an exercising mouse.

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Transonic Citations in Research Literature

Transonic Citations at the APS Conference: Integrative Biology of Exercise

American Physiological Society Published abstracts using Transonic products in The Physiologist - Integrative Biology of Exercises meeting, October 6-9, 2004 - Austin Texas.

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User News

Transonic Customers Get their Exercise Too!

Special congratulations go to Dr. Volkmar Gross, from the Max Delbruck Center for Molecular Medicine& Franz Volhard Clinic at the Humboldt University in Berlin. While Dr. Gross was attending the Annual Fall Conference of the Council for High Blood Pressure Research this October, he put himself to task and ran the Chicago Marathon.  The yearly marathon covers 26 miles and 385 yards throughout Chicago’s downtown, lakeside and beautiful park areas.  Dr. Gross proudly finished the event with a time of 4 hours, 36 minutes and 3 seconds.

When Dr. Gross is not running marathons, he is exercising his Transonic flowmeter in conscious mouse experiments.  Dr. Gross recently published a study utilizing Transonic 1.5PSL flowprobes implanted on the ascending aorta to record cardiac output concurrent with pressure telemetry from Data Sciences International ®.
..View the Publication>

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Frequently Asked Questions

Repairing Probe Connectors and Cut Cables

What should I do if the connector on my probe is damaged or disconnected from the probe cable?

The action you take depends on the extent of the damage.

  • If the probe cable has not been stretched or pulled and the internal wires are still intact, the connection can be professionally repaired by Transonic Systems.
  • If the probe is chronically implanted in the animal you may order a connector repair kit, depending on the connector and probe  style.  Although onsite repair of an implanted  probe is challenging, this method allows you to continue gathering critical  data from a chronically instrumented subject.

What are my options if the cable on one of my probes is accidentally cut, or chewed by an animal?

The probe cable can be professionally repaired by Transonic Systems by one of the following methods.

  • A new connector can be wired and attached to the probe cable at the location of the cut.  This means that the total probe cable length is shorter. The benefit to this method is that it keeps the probe cable sealed and intact since a splice is not required.
  • Cut probe cables can be spliced to maintain the original total cable length of the probe. This option needs to be considered carefully.  In this scenario, the integrity of the cable has been permanently weakened at the splice location.  You may still use a spliced probe for acute applications. Transonic Systems does not recommend using flowprobes with spliced cables for chronic implantation.
  • Scalpel nicks in the silicone jacket of the cable that have not damaged the individual wire jackets or the wires can often be repaired with silicone sealer without the need of a splice.

If the probe cables is cut within 1" of the probe body, the probe is non-repairable.

..Read More on Probe Care >
..Ordering Laboratory Research Probes >

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Customer Service

Introducing New Flow Specialists for US territories

    Ami C. Clevenger
    Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North & South Dakota, Illinois

    Ph:  800-353-3569 (Ext.898)
    Ph/Fax:  312-751-8721
    Cell:  773-519-8471
    Email: Ami.Clevenger@transonic.com

    Jeff Bentrim
    Texas / Oklahoma

    Ph:  800-353-3569 (Ext. 897)
    Cell:  832-563-3569
    Fax: 281-852-6549
    Email: Jeff.Bentrim@transonic.com

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We invite your comments, questions and suggestions and hope that “Transonic Materials and Methods” will become a forum for passing on your success stories, providing answers to some of your frustrations. If you have a new technique you’d like to share or a problem you need help with, please feel free to contact us.
 

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Transonic Materials and Methods

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