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Viscometer validation studies for routine and experimental hemorheological measurements.

Authors :
Kovacs D
Totsimon K
Biro K
Kenyeres P
Juricskay I
Kesmarky G
Toth K
Toth A
Source :
Clinical hemorheology and microcirculation [Clin Hemorheol Microcirc] 2018; Vol. 69 (3), pp. 383-392.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Viscosity measurement is challenging due to the internal properties of blood and the artifacts deriving from the various viscometer systems.<br />Objective: We aimed to determine the pitfalls of a cone-plate viscometer (Brookfield DV-III Ultra LV) before starting measurements and compare it to our capillary type model (Hemorex Hevimet 40). Effects of sample storage and thermal calibration were assessed as well.<br />Methods and Results: Intra-observer variability was studied by 10 replicate measurements of 7 blood samples, mean coefficients of variation were less than 5%. Instruments were compared by measuring 26 blood samples, an average difference of 7% in WBV and 10% in PV was observed. 9 blood samples were stored at 4°C, 22°C and 37°C up to 48 hours to study the effect of storage on viscosity values. WBV at 50 and 100 s-1 became significantly lower after 3 hours at 37°C (pā€Š<ā€Š0.05). WBV at higher shear rates and PV remained constant at all temperatures. To evaluate the possibility of measuring one sample at different temperatures, 8 blood samples were measured at 40°C with the device calibrated both at 20°C and 40°C; no significant difference was observed.<br />Conclusions: Thorough validation studies are required before starting experimental and routine viscosity measurements.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1875-8622
Volume :
69
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical hemorheology and microcirculation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29660906
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3233/CH-170301