NaF is non-toxic and maintains good flu. in biological tissues. 60% of it binds to protein in blood and 40% is in solution. The flu absorbs short wavel. light (blue) and emits longer (yellow/green)
Retinal flu
- Central Retinal Vessels - tight junctions in the epithelium, no NaF leaves the vessels normally
- Choriocapillaris - fenestrated epithelium. The NaF in solution passes straight out into the extracellular space and the NaF that's bound to the proteins will stay inside the capillaries
- Ciliary Body - Unbound NaF can leave vessels, join the aq. and colour the anterior chamber
- Optic Nerve - served by central retinal circulation (no leakage) but leakage in the choroid nearby will stain glial tissue and this is late staining which occurs after a few circulations of flu through the bloodstream
- Sclera - collagen is stained by flu from the choroid
- Injection - IV, rapid concentrated inj. Arm --> Heart --> Lungs --> L Heart --> Arteries --> CRA (takes 7 secs to get there)
- Observation w/fundus camera fitted with cobalt blue filter
- Risks/side fx - staining of skin and urine, 5-10% of px nausea and vomiting, rarely serious allergic reaction
- Arterial Phase - 7-9 secs after injection. This is the arm --> retina circulation time. The stained blood appears to be flowing up the middle of the arteries ("lamellar flow"). The choroid fills in a patchy way giving background flu.
- Venous Phase - 10-12secs --> 15secs. Arteries contain NaF, the capillaries are filled and the veins also begin to flow. The flu flows along the sides of the veins. Bright background from the choroid, bright filled arteries, veins w/lamellar filling, maximal brightness @ 14-18secs
- Late Phase - diffuse NaF in the blood, veins and arteries equal in brightness, background will be diffusely stained, staining of the optic nerve and sclera. This is 4-5 minutes after injection.
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