Blood viscosity in tube flow: dependence on diameter and hematocrit
A. R. Pries, D. Neuhaus and P. Gaehtgens Freie Universitat Berlin, Department of Physiology, Federal Republic of Germany. Since the original publications by Martini et al. (Dtsch. Arch. Klin. Med. 169: 212-222, 1930) and Fahraeus and Lindqvist (Am. J. Physiol. 96: 562-568, 1931), it has been known t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 1992-12, Vol.263 (6), p.H1770-H1778 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A. R. Pries, D. Neuhaus and P. Gaehtgens
Freie Universitat Berlin, Department of Physiology, Federal Republic of Germany.
Since the original publications by Martini et al. (Dtsch. Arch. Klin. Med.
169: 212-222, 1930) and Fahraeus and Lindqvist (Am. J. Physiol. 96:
562-568, 1931), it has been known that the relative apparent viscosity of
blood in tube flow depends on tube diameter. Quantitative descriptions of
this effect and of the dependence of blood viscosity on hematocrit in the
different diameter tubes are required for the development of hydrodynamic
models of blood flow through the microcirculation. The present study
provides a comprehensive data base for the description of relative apparent
blood viscosity as a function of tube diameter and hematocrit. Data
available from the literature are compiled, and new experimental data
obtained in a capillary viscometer are presented. The combined data base
comprises measurements at high shear rates (u > or = 50 s-1) in tubes
with diameters ranging from 3.3 to 1,978 microns at hematocrits of up to
0.9. If corrected for differences in suspending medium viscosity and
temperature, the data show remarkable agreement. Empirical fitting
equations predicting relative apparent blood viscosity from tube diameter
and hematocrit are presented. A pronounced change in the hematocrit
dependence of relative viscosity is observed in a range of tube diameters
in which viscosity is minimal. While a linear hematocrit-viscosity
relationship is found in tubes of < or = 6 microns, an overproportional
increase of viscosity with hematocrit prevails in tubes of > or = 9
microns. This is interpreted to reflect the hematocrit-dependent transition
from single- to multifile arrangement of cells in flow. |
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ISSN: | 0363-6135 0002-9513 1522-1539 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpheart.1992.263.6.h1770 |