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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 296: F1530-F1536, 2009. First published April 8, 2009; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.90756.2008
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INNOVATIVE METHODOLOGY

Electrohydraulic pump-driven closed-loop blood pressure-regulatory system

K. L. Siu,1 J. M. Ahn,2 and K. H. Chon1

1Department of Biomedical Engineering, SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York; and 2Department of Electronic Engineering, Hallym University, Gangwon-do, Korea

Submitted 18 December 2008 ; accepted in final form 7 April 2009

In this paper, we describe our design for a new electrohydraulic (EH) pump-driven renal perfusion pressure (RPP)-regulatory system capable of implementing precise and rapid RPP regulation in experimental animals. Without this automated system, RPP is manually controlled via a blood pressure clamp, and the imprecision in this method leads to compromised RPP data. This motivated us to develop an EH pump-driven closed-loop blood pressure regulatory system based on flow-mediated occlusion using the vascular occlusive cuff technique. A closed-loop servo-controller system based on a proportional plus integral (PI) controller was designed using the dynamic feedback RPP signal from animals. In vivo performance was evaluated via flow-mediated RPP occlusion, maintenance, and release responses during baseline and ANG II-infused conditions. A step change of –30 mmHg, referenced to normal RPP, was applied to Sprague-Dawley rats with the proposed system to assess the performance of the PI controller. The PI's performance was compared against manual control of blood pressure clamp to regulate RPP. Rapid RPP occlusion (within 3 s) and a release time of ~0.3 s were obtained for the PI controller for both baseline and ANG II infusion conditions, in which the former condition was significantly better than manual control. We concluded that the proposed EH RPP-regulatory system could fulfill in vivo needs to study various pressure-flow relationships in diverse fields of physiology, in particular, studying the dynamics of the renal autoregulatory mechanisms.

renal perfusion pressure; proportional plus integral compensation; tubuloglomerular feedback; myogenic



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: Ki H. Chon, Dept of Biomedical Engineering, HSC T18, Rm. 030, SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8181 (e-mail: ki.chon{at}sunysb.edu)







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