Six anesthetized rats received [15O]H2O and [15O]CO PET scans with their femoral artery and vein connected by an AV shunt, the activity within which was measured with a germanium ortho-oxysilicate scintillation detector. The [15O]H2O was intravenously injected either at a faster or slower injection rate, while animals were placed either with their head or heart centered in the gantry. The time-activity curve (TAC) from the AV shunt was compared with that from the cardiac ventricle in PET image. The rCBF values were calculated by a nonlinear least-square method using the dispersion-corrected AV-shunt TAC as an input.
The AV-shunt TAC had higher signal-to-noise ratio, but also had delay and dispersion compared with the image-derived TAC. The delay time between the AV-shunt TAC and image-based TAC ranged from 11 to 21 s, while the dispersion was estimated to be 鈭? s as a time constant of the dispersion model of exponential function, and both were properly corrected. In a steady-state condition of [15O]CO PET, the blood activity concentration by AV-shunt TAC was also comparable in height with the image-based TAC corrected for partial volume. Whole-brain CBF values measured by [15O]H2O were 0.37卤0.04 (mean卤S.D.) ml/g/min, partition coefficient was 0.73卤0.04 ml/g, and the CBF varied in a linear relationship with partial pressure of carbon dioxide during each scan.
The AV-shunt technique allows less invasive, quantitative and reproducible measurement of rCBF in [15O]H2O PET studies in rats than direct blood sampling and radioassay.