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Issue title: Proceedings of the Fourth International Congress of Biorheology. Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan, 27 July – 1 August 1981. Dedicated to Alex Silberberg
Guest editors: Alfred L. Copley
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Koyama, Tomiyasua | Kikuchi, Yujia | Horimoto, Masashia | Kakiuchi, Yoshihiroa | Tsushima, Nobukob | Nitta, Junkoc
Affiliations: [a] Research Institute of Applied Electricity,Hokkaido University, 060 Sapporo, Japan | [b] Sapporo Tonan Hospital, 060 Sapporo, Japan | [c] Sapporo Seishu Women’s College, 060 Sapporo, Japan
Note: [1] Paper prepared at the 4th International Congress of Biorheology, Tokyo, 1981.
Note: [] Accepted by: Editor E. Fukada
Abstract: The flow behaviors of white blood cells (WBCs) in frog’s pulmonary microvessels were recorded and analyzed by means of a microscope-TV camera system. When the flow velocity in arterioles was reduced to a level lower than 1 mm/sec by a moderate overinflation of the exposed lung, WBCs rolled on the endothelial surface, frequently came in contact with the capillary orifice and passed it quickly without deformation. The time length which was required for WBCs to pass through the capillary orifice was shorter than the time length for red blood cells. This observation suggested that WBCs were no hinderance to blood delivery from arterioles to the capillary network in the normal and moderate overinflation of the lung. However, when the lung was strongly overinflated and the center line flow velocity was reduced to 0.1 mm/sec, WBCs adhered to the endothelium in ten minutes. The adhering WBCs could not be detached by the recovery of the blood flow. It seemed probable that a large shear stress up to 100 to 200 dynes/cm2 was necessary to pull down the interaction between the adhering WBCs and the endothelium.
Keywords: white blood cells, adhesion to endothelium, pulmonary microvessels, shear stress, bullfrog
DOI: 10.3233/BIR-1982-191-224
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 19, no. 1-2, pp. 221-228, 1982
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