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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Sutton, D.W.; * | Schmid-Schönbein, G.W.; **
Affiliations: Institute for Biomedical Engineering, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, California, 92093-0412 USA
Correspondence: [**] Address correspondence to: G.W. Schmid-Schönbein; Tel.: 619-534-3852; Fax: 619-534-5722.
Note: [*] Current address: Naval Research and Development, 53475 Strothe Rd., Rm. 258, San Diego, California, 92152-6310 USA.
Abstract: In spite of numerous investigations of erythrocyte rheology, there is limited information about the influence of erythrocyte suspensions on whole organ pressure-flow relationships. In this study, we present whole organ pressure-flow curves for resting vasodilated gracilis muscle of the rat, in which the microanatomy and vessel properties have been determined previously. For pure erythrocyte suspensions from donor rats, the organ resistance increases only mildly with perfusion time (less than a 5% shift over a one-hour perfusion time), while in contrast, erythrocyte suspensions containing leukocytes show an increases of resistance near 100% over a period of 25 min. Variation in pressure-flow curves in the muscle at the same arterial hematocrit between different rats is less than 15%. The pressure-flow relation for pure erythrocyte suspensions depends on hematocrit. Shear thinning is exhibited at high hematocrits, while Newtonian behavior is approached at arterial hematocrits below 15%. The whole organ apparent viscosity for pure erythrocyte suspensions (normalized by cell-free plasma resistance) is a non-linear function of hematocrit; at physiological pressures, it reaches values comparable to those of apparent viscosities measured in rotational viscometers or in in vitro tube flow (diameters greater than 0.8 mm). The apparent viscosities estimated from the whole organ experiments tend to be higher than those measured in straight tubes under in vitro conditions. The pressure-flow curves for pure erythrocyte suspensions are shifted towards lower pressures than the curves for mixed suspensions of erythrocytes at the same hematocrit and with leukocytes at physiological cell counts. These acute experiments show that pure erythrocyte suspensions yield highly reproducible resistances in the skeletal muscle microcirculation with dilated arterioles. Relative apparent viscosities measured in vivo are higher than those measured in straight glass tubes of comparable dimesions.
Keywords: Microcirculation, pressure, flow, resistance, hematocrit, erythrocytes
DOI: 10.3233/BIR-1995-32103
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 32, no. 1, pp. 29-42, 1995
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