Abstract

A transcutaneous Doppler velocimeter has been used for monitoring changes in blood flow in the popliteal artery during and after exercise of the calf muscles on a calf-ergometer. The instrument and the positioning of the probe are described. The validity of the Doppler measurements has been assessed by comparing results after exercise and after 5 min arterial occlusion with venous occlusion plethysmography. For 10 healthy volunteers calibration lines were found which are curved. This can be ascribed partly to alinearity of the Doppler instrument and partly to changes of the diameter of the popliteal artery. Displacement of the probe with respect to the artery, which influences the measured velocity signal, can be detected and to a certain extent corrected by taking into account the intensity of the Doppler signal. The largest deviation of a data point from the corresponding calibration line varies for the ten subjects between 90 and 170 Hz in the high flow range (mean Doppler frequency around 1000 Hz) and between 20 and 60 Hz in the low flow range (mean Doppler frequency below 200 Hz).

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