RHEOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF HORSE BLOOD - SIGNIFICANCE DURING EXERCISE

Authors
Citation
Mr. Fedde et Sc. Wood, RHEOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF HORSE BLOOD - SIGNIFICANCE DURING EXERCISE, Respiration physiology, 94(3), 1993, pp. 323-335
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Respiratory System",Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00345687
Volume
94
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
323 - 335
Database
ISI
SICI code
0034-5687(1993)94:3<323:RCOHB->2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
When horses maximally exercise, splenic contraction and fluid movement out of the vascular compartment greatly increase the hematocrit (up t o 0.70). We studied the in vitro rheological characteristics of blood from Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses to determine the interaction of hematocrit and shear rate on apparent viscosity. We also compared the rheological characteristics of the blood before and after horses recei ved furosemide, a drug commonly used to prevent exercise-induced pulmo nary hemorrhage. Although the apparent viscosity of blood with a high hematocrit was high at low shear rates, it rapidly decreased as the sh ear rate increased and appeared to continue to decrease at shear rates above 450 sec-1, which was the limit of our measurement capability. F urosemide had no detectible influence on the measured in vitro rheolog ical characteristics of the blood at any hematocrit or shear rate stud ied. We postulate that during exercise, when shear rates in the circul ation are high, apparent viscosity at high hematocrit may approach val ues similar to those that occur during rest when both hematocrit and s hear rates are lower. Consequently, the shear-dependent properties of blood may create a homeostasis of viscosity in vivo during exercise so that high viscosity is not a major factor contributing to vascular re sistance.