Abstract
Several groups of investigators are using external detection of radiolabeled protein to study the flux of protein from plasma into the pulmonary interstitium. A basic assumption for these studies has been that the unbound (free) tracer concentration is small and insignificant. The purpose of this study is to evaluate how free tracer influences the determination of normalized slope index. A five-compartment model for the lung was used with transport equations for both unbound and bound nuclide flux. Parameters of the unbound and bound transport equations were varied to evaluate the sensitivity of normalized slope index to each parameter. The model was also compared with published protein flux data to investigate the validity of the transport model. Application of the model to external scan data provides a sensitive method for evaluating the flux of bound and unbound tracers into the pulmonary interstitium. We conclude that because the distribution volume for unbound tracer is large with respect to protein distribution volume, even a small amount of unbound tracer (2-5%) can create large errors in the determination of normalized slope index.
Published Version
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