The rate constant, K1, represents the delivery rate which defines the unidirectional
transport of the tracer from plasma or blood compartment to the first tissue compart-
ment. Using the Fick principle and Renkin-Crone model, K1 depends on perfusion,
f (mL mL1 min1), and the product of capillary permeability P (cm/min) and
capillary surface area S (cm2/cm3), P S:
K1 ¼ f 1 ePSf
ð16:5Þ
Transport must happen during the time that the blood stays in the capillaries
(1–3 s). Even if tracer resides in both blood plasma and blood cells, for many
radioligands only the ligand that is in blood plasma is available for transport; then
K1 depends on plasma flow instead of blood flow. The rate constant k2 represents
unidirectional transport back from tissue to the blood and is defined in terms of K1
and distribution volume, V1, of the tracer in the first tissue compartment:
k2
00 ¼ K1V1
ð16:6Þ
Both K1 and k2 depend on perfusion. In the case of central nervous system, if K1
gets strongly limited by the value of P S of the capillary endothelium owing to the
blood-brain barrier, one can assume the first tissue compartment (C1) to denote the
interstitial and intracellular spaces, whereas the second tissue compartment (C2) can
indicate a metabolic or a receptor-bound compartment within the tissue. Rate
constant defines the fractional tracer leaving the compartment per unit time measured
in units of s1. For a zero concentration, the rate constant can have values over 1.0
because if flow of material is zero, then the quantity of material transferred per unit
time is given by the product of rate constant as well as the amount of tracer in the
initiating compartment. K1 takes into account the perfusion-dependent component
expressed in units of milliliter plasma (or blood) per minute per milliliter tissue
(mL min1 mL1), whereas k20, k30,. . . represents fraction of mass transferred per
unit time with unit min1.
Compartmental modeling with the two-tissue model has been implemented in
syngo MBF which is an FDA-approved commercial software package.
16.4.1.4 Perfusion Limited Uptake
For blood flow limited uptake, if P S f, it reduces ePS/f to zero and hence
K1 ¼ f. This further leads to, k2 ¼ f/V1, and CV(t) ¼ C1(t)/V1. With one-tissue
compartmental model, i.e., when all tissue compartments are lumped into one, this
would equal the model for radiowater where rapid diffusion of water takes place in
the tissues. In the case of liver with large openings of capillary endothelium, the
organ is largely porous to all radiotracers. Therefore, blood flow is the first restrictive
feature for uptake, and the first tissue compartment (C1) represents extracellular
volume which comprises of both vascular and interstitial space. The second tissue
compartment (C2) characterizes the intracellular space in hepatocytes. Thus, K1 ¼ f,
and rate constants k3 and k4 denote the transport rates among extracellular and
intracellular compartments. Comparable models could be applied to tissues where
16
Role of Microfluidics and Nanofluidics in Managing CAD
283