Two, three, or four decaying exponentials are used to fit the long tails on indicator dilution curves for vascular tracers, e.g. albumin, by joining a multi-exponential function to a probability density curve representing a bolus injection.
Description
Fit the long tail of a vascular outflow curve from an indicator dilution curve with the sum of N exponentials at tjoin matching both the function, F, and the slope, S. N equals 2, 3 or 4. It is assumed that S is negative. N ----- \ Tail(t) = ) w(i)*exp( -k(i)*(t-tjoin) ) / ----- i = 1 where w(i) = a(i)*w(i+1), a(i)>0; k(i)=b(i)*k(i=1), b(i)>1. F is the value of the function and S is the slope at t=tjoin. The coefficients are more complicated than in the fractal case (see LongTailFractal), but reduce to the fractal expressions when the a's and b's are chosen so tat a1=a2=a3, and b1=b2=b3 It can be shown that N N ----- ----- \ \ F= ) w(i) and S= ) -w(i)*k(i) / / ----- ----- i = 1 i = 1 The user can use optimization to calculate values for the a's, b's, and tjoin. The restrictions on the a's and b's are all the the a's are greater than 0; all the b's are greater than 1.
For further information relating PowerLaw scaled models with power law models
Equations
None.
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L.M. Schwartz, T.R. Bukowski, J.H. Revkin, and J.B. Bassingthwaighte. Cardiac endothelial transport and metabolism of adenosine and inosine. Am. J. Physiol. 227 (Heart Circ. Physiol. 46):1231-1251, 1999.
Please cite https://www.imagwiki.nibib.nih.gov/physiome in any publication for which this software is used and send one reprint to the address given below:
The National Simulation Resource, Director J. B. Bassingthwaighte, Department of Bioengineering, University of Washington, Seattle WA 98195-5061.
Model development and archiving support at https://www.imagwiki.nibib.nih.gov/physiome provided by the following grants: NIH U01HL122199 Analyzing the Cardiac Power Grid, 09/15/2015 - 05/31/2020, NIH/NIBIB BE08407 Software Integration, JSim and SBW 6/1/09-5/31/13; NIH/NHLBI T15 HL88516-01 Modeling for Heart, Lung and Blood: From Cell to Organ, 4/1/07-3/31/11; NSF BES-0506477 Adaptive Multi-Scale Model Simulation, 8/15/05-7/31/08; NIH/NHLBI R01 HL073598 Core 3: 3D Imaging and Computer Modeling of the Respiratory Tract, 9/1/04-8/31/09; as well as prior support from NIH/NCRR P41 RR01243 Simulation Resource in Circulatory Mass Transport and Exchange, 12/1/1980-11/30/01 and NIH/NIBIB R01 EB001973 JSim: A Simulation Analysis Platform, 3/1/02-2/28/07.