Pressure-flow relations of human blood in hollow fibers at low flow rates
- 1 September 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 20 (5), 954-967
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1965.20.5.954
Abstract
Suspensions of human red cells in citrated plasma, in Ringer solution, and in Ringer solution containing albumin were passed through straight and curved glass and plastic hollow fibers (diameter range, 100–1,000 μ). Pressure-flow relations were measured over the pressure range of 0.1– 800 mm water, corresponding to a shear stress range of 0.01– 80 dynes/cm2. The suspensions were tested simultaneously in a rotational viscometer. It was found that red cell suspensions exhibit a yield shear stress only if the plasma protein fibrinogen is present. Experimental pressure-flow data in hollow fibers were in excellent agreement with rotational viscometer measurements and with analytical predictions based on the assumptions that blood flows as a homogeneous continuum and that the velocity at the wall is zero. Effects of tube surface characteristics and curvature on the pressure drop-flow rate relation were not discernible. microcirculation models; model blood flow; yield stress of blood; capillary blood flow and viscometry; fibrinogen and blood flow in hollow fibers; non-Newtonian flow of blood in hollow fibers Submitted on July 20, 1964This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Non-Newtonian Rheology of Human Blood - Effect of Fibrinogen Deduced by "Subtraction"Circulation Research, 1963
- The Rheology of Human Blood—Measurement Near and at Zero Shear RateTransactions of the Society of Rheology, 1963
- Rheology of blood and flow in the microcirculationJournal of Applied Physiology, 1963