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Price: EUR 185.00Authors: Temiz, A. | Başkurt, O.K. | Pekçetin, Ç. | Kandemir, F. | Güre, A.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Red blood cell (RBC) mechanical alterations and oxidative damage were investigated after an acute exhausting exercise in rats, together with the leukocyte activation. The groups formed as follows. Control (C) (n=9 ), group I (n=9 ) and group II (n=7 ) from which blood samples were collected 15 minutes and 24 hours respectively, after acute exercise. The rats were subjected to running at a speed of 17 m/min until exhaustion. The leukocyte phagocytic activity (LPA), RBC lipid peroxidation and RBC deformability were measured. LPA increased significantly after the exhausting exercise and prolonged till 24 hours (p=0.0168 …). RBC membrane lipid peroxidation was gradually increased till 24 hours (p=0.0297 ) and there was a significant correlation between LPA and RBC lipid peroxidation (r=0.63 , p=0.015 ). There was a slight but significant decrease in mean corpusculer volume (MCV) (p=0.0467 ) and increase in mean corpusculer hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) (p=0.0458 ) suggesting a cellular dehydratation after 24 hours. No significant alteration was detected in RBC deformability, assessed by the Cell Transit Analyzer (CTA) and thought that decreased MCV might have masked to determine the alterations in membrane mechanical properties in CTA. As a conclusion the results imply that activated leukocytes might play role in the RBC damage observed after exhausting exercise encouraging oxidative stress. Show more
Keywords: Exercise, erythrocyte, oxidative, rat
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 253-259, 2000
Authors: Wen, Zongyao | Xie, Jingxia | Guan, ZengWei | Sun, Dagong | Yao, Weijuan | Chen, Kai | Yan, Zong‐yi | Mu, Qiwen
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: To evaluate the change of hemorheological indexes for patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) at the early stages and to discuss effects of these changes on AD, high shear value of whole blood viscosity (ηbh ), reduced high shear value of whole blood viscosity (rηbh ), low shear value of whole blood viscosity (ηbl ), reduced low shear, value of whole blood viscosity (rηbl ), KT value of whole blood viscosity, hematocrit (HCT) and blood plasma viscosity (ηP ) were measured in 31 patients with probable AD at the early stages and 33 age‐matched healthy subjects. There were significant differences of …all hemorheological indexes between AD group and control group except HCT. Step discriminant analysis revealed 81.25% of overall group‐classified accuracy in a hemorheological discriminant function consisting of ηbl , rηbl , rηbh and HCT. Significant difference of hemorheological indexes existed between AD and age‐matched healthy control subjects. The results showed that measurement of hemorheological indexes could be used as one of reference standards of diagnosis in AD. Show more
Keywords: Blood viscosity, Alzheimer's disease, hemorheology
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 261-266, 2000
Authors: Bor‐Küçükatay, M. | Yalçin, Ö. | Gökalp, O. | Kipmen‐Korgun, D. | Yesilkaya, A. | Baykal, A. | Ispir, M. | Senturk, Ü.K. | Kaputlu, I. | Başkurt, O.K.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Nitric oxide (NO) plays a major role in vascular regulation. Modulation of NO synthesis is known to influence blood pressure. Inhibition of NO synthesis by NG‐nitro‐L‐arginine methyl ester (L‐NAME; 72 mg/kg/day, p.o., 21 days) resulted in 60% increase in blood pressure in rats. Red blood cell (RBC) transit time measured by the cell transit analyzer increased significantly in the L‐NAME treated group, in comparison to normotensive rats. RBC aggregation measured in autologous plasma, by a photometric rheoscope also increased significantly in the hypertensive rats. RBC cytosolic free calcium concentration was also significantly higher in the hypertensive animals. Incubation of RBC …from hypertensive and control animals with NO donor, sodium nitroprussid (SNP; 10–1000 μM) for 60 minutes resulted in a dose‐dependent decrease in RBC aggregation, however aggregation index was significantly higher in hypertensive group at each SNP concentration. Incubation with SNP had no effect on RBC deformability in the control group, while a slight decrease in RBC transit time was observed only at 10 μM SNP in the hypertensive group. These results imply that NO may play a role in the regulation of rheological properties of RBC and the alterations in these properties may at least in part be involved in the development of L‐NAME induced hypertension. Show more
Keywords: Hypertension, erythrocyte aggregation, erythrocyte deformability, nitric oxide, L‐NAME
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 267-275, 2000
Authors: Monnier, J.F. | Aïssa Benhaddad, A. | Micallef, J.P. | Mercier, J. | Brun, J.F.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Exercise training is known (1) to enhance the function of the GH–IGF‐I system, which has profound effects on body fluid status; (2) to increase blood fluidity. Thus, we investigated during an exercise‐test in 39 male elite sportsmen (age 23.7±0.72 years; body mass index 23.7±0.28 kg/m2 ) the possible relationships between GH and IGF‐I status and the rheological properties of blood. Two correlations indicate a relationship between body hydration and fitness: isometric handgrip strength is correlated with the percentage of extracellular water in total body water (r=0.432, p=0.02) and the aerobic working capacity W170 is negatively correlated with hematocrit (r=−0.341, …p=0.039). Water loss during exercise appears to be inversely related to fitness as evaluated by W170 (r=−0.529, p=0.05), and is positively correlated with the score of signs of overtraining (r=0.725, p=0.003) and with the red boood cell aggregation index (r=0.584, p=0.036). Finally, while the GH peak value is correlated with the extracellular water volume (r=0.393, p=0.02), IGF‐I is correlated with blood viscosity (r=0.546, p=0.0003), suggesting that when IGF‐I values are within the upper quintile (>340 ng/ml) IGF‐I may unfavourably affect blood rheology. Among factors of blood viscosity, IGF‐I exhibits a borderline correlation (p=0.05) with “Tk” and the ratio IGF1/IGFBP3 which reflects free circulating IGF‐I is correlated with red cell aggregability measured with the Myrenne “M” (r=0.485, p=0.014) and S60 (r=0.396, p=0.494). These findings confirm the importance of hydration and dehydration as determinants of both blood rheology and exercise performance. Moreover, they suggest that values of IGF‐I within the upper quintile are associated with an impairment of blood fluidity, possibly due to a direct effect of IGF‐I on red cell deformability and aggregability. Show more
Keywords: Blood viscosity, hemorheology, erythrocyte deformability, erythrocyte aggregability, human, male, exercise training, overtraining, insulin‐like growth factor binding protein 1, insulin‐like growth factor binding protein 3, insulin‐like growth factor I, growth hormone, body fluids, sweating
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 277-286, 2000
Authors: Brun, J.F. | Bouchahda, C. | Chaze, D. | Aïssa Benhaddad, A. | Micallef, J.P. | Mercier, J.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: The paradox of hematocrit in exercise physiology is that artificially increasing it by autotransfusion or erythropoietin doping improves VO2 max and performance, while in normal conditions there is a strong negative correlation between hematocrit and fitness, due to a training‐induced “autohemodilution”. We aimed at investigating: (a) which is the physiological range of hematocrit in highly trained professional footballers; (b) what are the characteristics of athletes with high vs low hematocrit? We determined in 77 healthy male footballers the physiological range (mean±sd) of hematocrit: 42.3±2.74, (range −2σ/+2σ=36.8–47.8%) thus defining boundaries of quintiles of distribution for this parameter: 40, 41.6, 42.9, …44.6. In another sample of 42 male footballers we compared three groups: lowest quintile (n=8), highest quintile (n=5) and the three middle quintiles considered together (n=29). Athletes in the lowest quintile compared to those in the four other quintiles had a lower value of blood viscosity (−8%, p<0.01) but this difference disappeared after correction for hematocrit. These subjects with low hematocrit had also higher values of the following parameters: aerobic working capacity (p<0.01); isometric adductor strength (p=0.02); crossover point of carbohydrate oxidation (70% carbohydrates/30% lipids) (p<0.05); insulin like growth factor binding protein 1 (p<0.0001). Athletes in the highest quintile had higher red cell aggregability (Myrenne index “M1” 8.45±0.38 vs 6.82±0.62, p<0.04) and a higher disaggregability threshold γD (72.6±22.63 vs 44.49±1.37, p<0.01) and a lower percentage of water in fat‐free mass (p<0.02). On the whole sample hematocrit was negatively correlated with aerobic working capacity (W170 r=−0.329, p=0.007; Wmax (% of expected value) r=−0.552, p=0.008; VO2 max (% of expected value) r=−0.543, p=0.009) and with ferritin (r=−0.33, p=0.031), and positively correlated with the overtraining score (r=0.352, p=0.019) which was in turn negatively correlated with ferritin r=−0.312, p=0.02). Besides, hematocrit behaves as a major determinant of blood viscosity (correlation with blood viscosity r=0.997, p<10−7 ) and erythrocyte disaggregability γD (r=0.384, p=0.03), but the hematocrit/viscosity ratio (h/η index of O2 delivery) remains maintained almost constant over the range of values studied. These results show that (a) physiological values of hematocrit in these athletes are comprised between 36 and 48%; (b) “low” hematocrit (<40%) was associated with a higher aerobic capacity; (c) subjects with the higher hematocrits (>44.6%) were frequently overtrained and/or iron‐deficient, and their blood viscosity (and red cell disaggregability) tended to be increased. Show more
Keywords: Hematocrit, blood viscosity, hemorheology, erythrocyte deformability, human, male, exercise training, overtraining, body fluids, lipid oxidation, glucose oxidation
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 287-303, 2000
Authors: Zhui, Yu | Jing‐Ping, Ou‐Yang | Yongming, Liu | Lei, Wei | Shuzheng, Tu | Hailu, Yang | Hanqiao, Zhen | Xiaohong, Yan
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: This experiment was designed to study the antiatherogenesis action of angelica injection and its mechanisms on classic atherosclerotic rabbit model. Eighteen Japanese rabbits were divided randomly into three groups: a control group, a high‐lipid group and an angelica group; and common forage, high lipid forage and high lipid adding angelica injection were given to each group accordingly. At the end of the tenth week, blood samples were obtained through carotid artery intubation for evidence of serum lipids and hemorheology. Thoracic aorta were prepared for measurement of the plaque area. The results showed that (1) the plaque area in the high‐lipid …group was larger than in the angelica group: (35.58\pm7.25 % vs 63.31\pm7.46 %); (2) serum lipids level in the high‐lipid group and angelica group were significantly higher than those in the control group (p<0.01 ). Apart from triglyceride (TG), there was no difference of total cholesterol (Tch), high‐density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL‐ch), and low‐density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL‐ch) between the high‐lipid group and the angelica group; (3) angelica increased whole blood viscosity, hematocrit and fibrinogen under hyperlipidemic conditions. We concluded that angelica can inhibit rabbit aorta atherogenesis through decreasing the serum triglyceride concentration and its effects on hemorheology. Show more
Keywords: Angelica, rabbit, atherosclerosis, hyperlipidemia, triglyceride, hemorheology
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 305-310, 2000
Authors: Signorelli, Salvatore Santo | Malaponte, Maria Grazia | Di Pino, Luigi | Costa, Maria Pia | Pennisi, Giuseppe | Mazzarino, Maria Clorinda
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Background: many studies have investigated between venous stasis, functions of the vascular and perivascular anastomotic structure, venous endothelium and circulating leukocytes. Setting: patients with varicose veins (n=15) and a healthy control group (n=15). Methods: the authors investigated some soluble mediators of monocytes‐macrophages, which induce inflammation. They determined interleukin 1β (IL‐1β) and interleukin 6 (IL‐6) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) levels at rest and after induced venous occlusion (using an inflated cuff to 60 mmHg for 25 minutes). Results: their results revealed elevated baseline production in the former and that induced venous occlusion further augmented the levels of all cytokines …in the study series, especially in patients with varicose veins. Conclusion: The authors believe that the study shows functional activation of monocyte‐macrophages related to venous stasis as a consequence of venous hypertension. Cell response damages the endothelial structure and may represent an important element in the pathophysiology of chronic venous insufficiency. Show more
Keywords: Venous stasis, cytokines, venous disease
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 311-316, 2000
Authors: Xiaohong, Yan | Jing‐Ping, Ou‐Yang | Shuzheng, Tu
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Oxidative modification of low‐density lipoproteins (LDL) is important in the etiology and pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Alterations of function and structure of vascular endothelial cells (ECs) mark the early stages of the development of atherogenesis. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were used to investigate the role of angelica in human vascular ECs damage. HUVECs incubated with 0.1 mg/ml of ox‐LDL for 24 hours exhibited more pronounced morphological change, such as: cell shrinkage, disappearance of microvilli on EC surface, cellular membrane rupture, intercellular space enlargement, and significantly increased intercellular adhesion molecule‐1 (ICAM‐1) expression. The effects of ox‐LDL on morphology and ICAM‐1 …can be reversed by Angelica. The effect of Angelica on Cu2+ ‐catalyzed LDL oxidation was also studied and it was demonstrated that Angelica produced a concentration dependent inhibition of LDL oxidation as assessed by thiobarbituric acid‐reactive substances (TBARS). Our findings indicate that Angelica has protective effect against ox‐LDL induced damage on cultured HUVECs, an antioxidant effect on LDLs, and an inhibiting effect on ox‐LDL induced ICAM‐1 expression of endothelial cells. These findings further provided experiment proofs for the antiatherogenesis effect of Angelica. Show more
Keywords: Angelica, oxidation, low‐density lipoproteins, atherosclerosis, ICAM‐1, microstructure
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 317-323, 2000
Authors: Khaled, S. | Brun, J.F. | Cassanas, G. | Bardet, L. | Mercier, J. | Préfaut, C.
Article Type: Research Article
Citation: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 325-329, 2000
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