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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Brun, J.F.a; b | Sekkat, M.a; b | Lagoueyte, C.a; b | Fédou, C.a; b | Orsetti, A.a; b
Affiliations: [a] Service d’Exploration Physiologique des Hormones et des Métabolismes, Hôpital Lapeyronie, Montpellicr, France | [b] Laboratoire de Physiologie II, Institut de Biologie, Faculté de Médecine, 34060 Montpellier, France
Note: [] Accepted by: Editor M.R. Boisseau
Abstract: 18 healthy untrained children (13 boys, 5 girls) performed a 15 min submaximal incremental exercise on cycloergometer rising heart rate (HR) up to a final step (5min) at 90% of theoretical maximal heart rate. Whole blood viscosity (at high shear rate), plasma viscosity and hematocrit increased after exercise (p < 0.01). The index of fitness Ẇ 170 was negatively correlated with blood viscosity at rest (r = 0.752, p < 0.001). Plasma viscosity and hematocrit were also correlated with Ẇ 170 while relative blood viscosity at corrected hematocrit 45% did not show such a correlation. Therefore (a) exercising children undergo the same hemorheologic modification as adults; (b) Ẇ 170, a very classical index of fitness, is strongly related to blood fluidity; (c) the viscosity of blood at very high shear rate (i.e. reflecting the newtonian behavior of blood) is correlated with fitness; (c) the factors of blood viscosity involved in this relationship appear to be plasma viscosity and hematocrit rather than red cell flexibility.
Keywords: blood viscosity, hematocrit, fitness, exercise, hemorheology, children
DOI: 10.3233/CH-1989-9606
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 9, no. 6, pp. 953-963, 1989
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