Abstract
This work was done as the first part of a continuing study of neonatal blood.
In a recent paper (1), two parameters, “A” (relative whole-blood viscosity at unit rate of shear and 1% haematocrit) and “β” (shear-sensitivity exponent) were proposed, as characteristics of a given blood-sample.
Here, some 60 placentae yielded (after plasma-manipulation) 130 sub-samples having haematocrits ranging from 3% to 90%. Their viscosities were measured in a capillary viscometer set for a constant wall shear-stress of 1855 mPa. “A” and “β” were calculated by the method given in (1). Multiple calculations on a number of sub - samples revealed systematic variations within anyone blood; but when every A/β ratio is plotted against the corresponding A, the results follow a smooth curve.
This curve occupies a striking, almost central location when A-and-β values from adult normal and pathological bloods (rotational viscometry) are superimposed on the diagram.
An analytic form for the close correlation between haematocrit and relative placental blood-viscosity is given by the adoption of a single “group A” and “group β” for all 130 results.
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