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Issue title: The Fourth European Conference on Clinical Hemorheology. Part I. Siena, Italy, 20–22 June 1985
Subtitle: New trends in haemodilution and plasmapheresis: Theory, in vivo and in vitro monitoring and results of “antithixotropic” therapies
Guest editors: Alfred L. Copley, Tullio Di Perri and Sandro Forconi
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Schmid-Schönbein, Holgera; b; c
Affiliations: [a] Abteilung Physiologic, RWTH Klinikum, Pauwelsstrasse, D-5100 Aachen, West Germany | [b] In collaboration with G. Gallasch, Universitätsaugenklinik Heidelberg, F.R. Germany | [c] H.A.J. Lemmens, Dept. of Surgery, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands
Abstract: Blood rheology is “overtly abnormal” in various haematological diseases classically designated as “hyperviscosity states”; these disorders are rare and can be easily diagnosed. Much more common are diseases with “covertly abnormal” blood rheology, in which the rheological abnormality is present as an epiphenomenon to a vascular disorder. In diseases such as retinal arterial occlusion and secondary RAYNAUD phenomenon (early manifestations of systemic sclerosis) there is evidence of “abnormal blood thixotropy” i.e. a pathological tendency of the blood to loose its fluidity when subjected to low shear stresses. This tendency is assumed to perpetuate a low flow state caused by other haemodynamic abnormalities. Isovolaemic haemodilution and plasmapheresis were employed with clinical success in retinal artery occlusion and secondary Raynaud phenomenon, respectively. The two forms of “antithixotropic” therapy were accompanied by clearly lowered blood thixotropy, clinical improvement and augmented blood flow.
Keywords: Isovolaemic Haemodilution, Hyperviscosity syndromes, Plasma viscosity, Red Cell Aggregation, Haematocrit, Retinal Artery Occlusion, Secondary Raynaud Phenomenon, Plasmapheresis
DOI: 10.3233/CH-1985-5608
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 5, no. 6, pp. 899-916, 1985
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