Author:
Sarathy Srivats,Nino Marco A.,Ghanim Abdulsattar H.,Rajagopal Srinivasan,Mubeen Syed,Raghavan M. L.
Abstract
In vivo measurement of the flow rate of physiological fluids such as the blood flow rate in the heart is vital in critically ill patients and for those undergoing surgical procedures. The reliability of these measurements is therefore quite crucial. However, current methods in practice for measuring flow rates of physiological fluids suffer from poor repeatability and reliability. Here, we assessed the feasibility of a flow rate measurement method that leverages time transient electrochemical behavior of a tracer that is injected directly into a medium (the electrochemical signal caused due to the tracer injectate will be diluted by the continued flow of the medium and the time response of the current—the electrodilution curve—will depend on the flow rate of the medium). In an experimental flow loop apparatus equipped with an electrochemical cell, we used the AC voltammetry technique and tested the feasibility of electrodilution-based measurement of the flow rate using two mediums—pure water and anticoagulated blood—with 0.9 wt% saline as the injectate. The electrodilution curve was quantified using three metrics—change in current amplitude, total time, and change in the total charge for a range of AC voltammetry settings (peak voltages and frequencies). All three metrics showed an inverse relationship with the flow rate of water and blood, with the strongest negative correlation obtained for change in current amplitude. The findings are a proof of concept for the electrodilution method of the flow rate measurement and offer the potential for physiological fluid flow rate measurement in vivo.