Abstract
An intravenous 133Xe clearance technique is described, giving very low values of global cerebral blood flow (CBF.infin.) in mechanically ventilated, preterm infants. External monitoring of the chest is used to estimate the arterial input function to the brain, with a modified correction to allow for increased recirculation due to right-to-left shunting. The results compared well in 10 studies in seven infants, where CBF.infin. could also be calculated from direct simultaneous blood sampling from the right radial artery (7.9 ml/100 g/min .+-. 2.5 SD vs. 8.4 .+-. 3.6, p > 0.05). In 25 studies in 12 infants the results compared well with those calculated from simultaneous 133Xe concentrations in expired air. Fifteen-minute clearance data gave better precision than 8-min data. The modified chest curve correction was partly effective in a case of extreme right-to-left shunting.