The University of Arizona
University of Arizona Biomedical Engineering Picture of Cacti in Arizona
BME Seminar - Fall 2003 Brooke McGuire

Front Page
updated Updated September 22 2008
Application Info
Apply Now
Financial Aid
Campus Life
Graduate Program
Undergraduate Specialization
Courses
Student Handbook
BME Seminar Info
Faculty
Staff
Research Areas
Students
Alumni
Library
AHSC
Arizona Research Labs
Computing Services
Organizations
Societies
  All contents copyright © 2008. Arizona Board of Regents.
Biomedical Engineering Seminar Abstract
Fall 2003 September 22nd - Brooke McGuire, Dissertation Defense for PhD in Biomedical Engineering

Mathematical Modeling Of Oxygen Transport In Skeletal Muscle Under Conditions Of High Oxygen Demand
- pdf version of the abstract

Maximal oxygen consumption rates in exercising skeletal muscle are studied using a Krogh-type cylinder model. Effects of the decline in oxygen content of blood flowing along capillaries, intravascular resistance to oxygen diffusion, and myoglobin-facilitated diffusion are included. Parameter values are based on human skeletal muscle. The model is used to predict oxygen consumption rates in exercising skeletal muscle, based on transport processes occurring at the microvascular level. The dependence of maximal oxygen consumption rates on oxygen demand, perfusion, and capillary density (defined as number of capillaries per unit cross-section area of muscle) is examined. When demand is high, model results show that capillary oxygen content declines rapidly with axial distance and radial oxygen transport is limited by resistance to diffusion within the capillary and within the tissue. Under these conditions, much of the tissue is hypoxic and consumption is substantially less than demand. Predicted consumption rates are compared with experimentally observed maximal rates of oxygen consumption.
The model can be used to estimate capillary density in human skeletal muscle by determining the minimum number of straight, evenly spaced capillaries required to achieve a given oxygen consumption rate. Estimated capillary density values are generally higher than values obtained using either histochemical staining techniques or electron microscopy on quadriceps muscle biopsies from healthy subjects. This discrepancy is partly accounted for by the fact that capillary density decreases with muscle contraction, and muscle biopsy samples typically are strongly contracted. These results imply that estimates of maximal oxygen transport rates based on capillary density values obtained from biopsy samples do not fully reflect the oxygen transport capacity of the capillaries in skeletal muscle.
The model is also used to predict decreases in oxygen consumption in maximally exercising muscle due to reductions in the inspired partial pressure of oxygen. In general, observed reductions in maximal oxygen consumption rates due to hypoxic breathing conditions are larger than predicted by the model, suggesting that responses to hypoxia not currently included in the model, such as decreases in oxygen demand or in muscle blood flow, may be important in determining maximal oxygen consumption in hypoxic conditions.