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New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments

The thesis is concerned with a fundamental mathematical analysis of inert gas transport through biological tissue at a raised ambient partial pressure. Three basic time-scales of transport in tissue are defined and their relationship examined and compared with existing models, which e.re shown to be...

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Main Author: Hennessy, Thomas Richard
Other Authors: Brundrit, Geoff
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hennessy, Thomas Richard
author2 Brundrit, Geoff
author_browse Brundrit, Geoff
Hennessy, Thomas Richard
author_facet Brundrit, Geoff
Hennessy, Thomas Richard
author_sort Hennessy, Thomas Richard
collection Thesis
description The thesis is concerned with a fundamental mathematical analysis of inert gas transport through biological tissue at a raised ambient partial pressure. Three basic time-scales of transport in tissue are defined and their relationship examined and compared with existing models, which e.re shown to be usually inadequate in one or more ways. As a result three new mathematical models are proposed and solved both asymptotically and numerically. The first is applied to experimental data for non-perfused tissue which yields an improved value of the intracellular diffusion coefficient for nitrogen. An expression is also derived which should be useful in evaluating this constant and the volume fraction of extracellular fluid. The second embraces a number of current models and is applicable to perfused tissue. It should be useful in interpreting inert gas uptake curves. The model is applied to experimental data, and a source of possible error is discovered in using experimental non-asymptotic time constants. The third is a model which claims to resolve the controversy between the diffusion and perfusion theories of gas transport in tissue. The result is that in the large, diffusion is more important than perfusion, except in muscle tissue where they interact. Three different methods of numerical inversion of the Laplace Transform are compared and one is shown to be the most useful for solving gas uptake problems. The main result of the thesis is a contribution to the establishment of a mathematical basis for gas transport in various situations in the biological sphere.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:26.417Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics
publisherStr Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/17678 New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments Hennessy, Thomas Richard Brundrit, Geoff Van Zyl, J J W Mathematics The thesis is concerned with a fundamental mathematical analysis of inert gas transport through biological tissue at a raised ambient partial pressure. Three basic time-scales of transport in tissue are defined and their relationship examined and compared with existing models, which e.re shown to be usually inadequate in one or more ways. As a result three new mathematical models are proposed and solved both asymptotically and numerically. The first is applied to experimental data for non-perfused tissue which yields an improved value of the intracellular diffusion coefficient for nitrogen. An expression is also derived which should be useful in evaluating this constant and the volume fraction of extracellular fluid. The second embraces a number of current models and is applicable to perfused tissue. It should be useful in interpreting inert gas uptake curves. The model is applied to experimental data, and a source of possible error is discovered in using experimental non-asymptotic time constants. The third is a model which claims to resolve the controversy between the diffusion and perfusion theories of gas transport in tissue. The result is that in the large, diffusion is more important than perfusion, except in muscle tissue where they interact. Three different methods of numerical inversion of the Laplace Transform are compared and one is shown to be the most useful for solving gas uptake problems. The main result of the thesis is a contribution to the establishment of a mathematical basis for gas transport in various situations in the biological sphere. 2016-03-14T07:03:52Z 2016-03-14T07:03:52Z 1973 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17678 eng application/pdf Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Mathematics
Hennessy, Thomas Richard
New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
title_full New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
title_fullStr New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
title_full_unstemmed New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
title_short New mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
title_sort new mathematical models of inert gas transport through biological tissue in hyperbaric environments
topic Mathematics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17678
work_keys_str_mv AT hennessythomasrichard newmathematicalmodelsofinertgastransportthroughbiologicaltissueinhyperbaricenvironments