
Microfluidics for simultaneous quantification of platelet adhesion and blood viscosity
Author(s) -
Eunseop Yeom,
Junhong Park,
Yang Jun Kang,
Sang Joon Lee
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/srep24994
Subject(s) - platelet adhesion , microfluidics , blood viscosity , platelet , adhesion , viscosity , computational biology , chemistry , medicine , nanotechnology , biology , materials science , organic chemistry , composite material
Platelet functions, including adhesion, activation, and aggregation have an influence on thrombosis and the progression of atherosclerosis. In the present study, a new microfluidic-based method is proposed to estimate platelet adhesion and blood viscosity simultaneously. Blood sample flows into an H-shaped microfluidic device with a peristaltic pump. Since platelet aggregation may be initiated by the compression of rotors inside the peristaltic pump, platelet aggregates may adhere to the H-shaped channel. Through correlation mapping, which visualizes decorrelation of the streaming blood flow, the area of adhered platelets ( A Platelet ) can be estimated without labeling platelets. The platelet function is estimated by determining the representative index I A·T based on A Platelet and contact time. Blood viscosity is measured by monitoring the flow conditions in the one side channel of the H-shaped device. Based on the relation between interfacial width ( W ) and pressure ratio of sample flows to the reference, blood sample viscosity ( μ ) can be estimated by measuring W . Biophysical parameters ( I A·T , μ ) are compared for normal and diabetic rats using an ex vivo extracorporeal model. This microfluidic-based method can be used for evaluating variations in the platelet adhesion and blood viscosity of animal models with cardiovascular diseases under ex vivo conditions.