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Viscosity, cerebral blood flow and haematocrit in patients with paraproteinaemia
Author(s) -
Humphrey P. R. D.,
Boulay G. H.,
Marshall J.,
Pearson T. C.,
Russell R. W. Ross,
Slater N. G. P.,
Symon L.,
WetherleyMein G.,
Zilkha E.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
acta neurologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.967
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1600-0404
pISSN - 0001-6314
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0404.1980.tb01484.x
Subject(s) - blood viscosity , hematocrit , cerebral blood flow , medicine , hemorheology , hyperviscosity , viscosity , limiting , blood flow , oxygen , anesthesia , cardiology , chemistry , materials science , mechanical engineering , engineering , composite material , organic chemistry
It has been suggested that blood viscosity is involved in the control of cerebral blood flow (CBF) ( Thomas et al. 1977a, b, Humphrey et al. 1979). CBF, using the intravenous Xenon 133 technique, blood viscosity and haematocrit were measured in 21 patients with elevated viscosity due to paraproteinaemia and found to be the same as in normal subjects. However, the paraproteinaemic patients were anaemic with a mean haematocrit of 0.342. This degree of anaemia would normally be associated with a high CBF. The paraproteinaemic patients were then compared with a group of 10 anaemic patients with matched haematocrits but without paraprotein bands. The whole blood and plasma viscosities were significantly higher in the paraproteinaemic patients and the CBF was significantly lower. The haematocrit, and therefore oxygen carriage, was similar in the two groups. It is likely that in the anaemia of paraproteinaemia the expected increase in CBF did not occur because of the limiting factor of increased viscosity. This suggests that in this instance viscosity rather than oxygen carriage is a major determinant in the control of CBF. This is further emphasized by the better correlation between CBF and blood viscosity than between CBF and haematocrit. It seems likely that viscosity and oxygen carriage are independent variables in the control of CBF.

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