Blood Gases: Continuous in vivo Recording of Partial Pressures by Mass Spectrography

Gases were sampled directly from circulating blood through a membrane at the tip of an intravascular cannula that was connected to the analyzing section of a mass spectrometer. Partial gas pressures and membrane permeability determine gas flow into the spectrometer. Arterial carbon dioxide and oxygen pressures were simultaneously recorded in an anesthetized animal subjected to various respiratory maneuvers.

[1]  R WOLF,et al.  Continuous recording of blood oxygen tensions by polarography. , 1953, Journal of applied physiology.

[2]  P. Rhodes,et al.  Sources of error in oxygen tension measurement. , 1966, Journal of applied physiology.

[3]  S. Woldring Interrelation between lung volume, arterial CO2 tension, and respiratory activity. , 1965, Journal of applied physiology.

[4]  D. Cugell,et al.  Measurement of blood PO2 with the microcathode electrode. , 1966, Journal of applied physiology.