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Title: Tissue Oxygenation Around Capillaries: Effects of Hematocrit and Arteriole Oxygen Condition. Author: Amiri FA, Zhang J. Journal: Bull Math Biol; 2023 May 02; 85(6):50. PubMed ID: 37129671. Abstract: Oxygen transfer in the microvasculature is a complex phenomenon that involves multiple physical and chemical processes and multiple media. Hematocrit, the volume fraction of red blood cells (RBCs) in blood, has direct influences on the blood flow as well as the oxygen supply in the microcirculation. On the one hand, a higher hematocrit means that more RBCs present in capillaries, and thus, more oxygen is available at the source end. On the other hand, the flow resistance increases with hematocrit, and therefore, the RBC motion becomes slower, which in turn reduces the influx of oxygen-rich RBCs entering capillaries. Such double roles of hematocrit have not been investigated adequately. Moreover, the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation rate depends on the oxygen tension and hemoglobin saturation of the cytoplasm inside RBCs, and the dissociation kinetics exhibits a nonlinear fashion at different oxygen tensions. To understand how these factors and mechanisms interplay in the oxygen transport process, computational modeling and simulations are favorite since we have a good control of the system parameters and also we can access to the detailed information during the transport process. In this study, we conduct numerical simulations for the blood flow and RBC deformation along a capillary and the oxygen transfer from RBCs to the surrounding tissue. Different values for the hematocrit, arteriole oxygen tension, tissue metabolism rate and hemoglobin concentration and affinity are considered, and the simulated spatial and temporal variations of oxygen concentration are analyzed in conjunction with the nonlinear oxygen-hemoglobin reaction kinetics. Our results show that there are two competing mechanisms for the tissue oxygenation response to a hematocrit increases: the favorite effect of the higher RBC density and the negative effect of the slower RBC motion. Moreover, in the low oxygen situations with RBC oxygen tension less than 50 mmHg at capillary inlet, the reduced RBC velocity effect dominates, resulting in a decrease in tissue oxygenation at higher hematocrit. On the opposite, for RBC oxygen tension higher than 50 mmHg when entering the capillary, a higher hematocrit is beneficial to the tissue oxygenation. More interestingly, the pivoting arteriole oxygen tension at which the two competing mechanisms switch dominance on tissue oxygenation becomes lower for higher oxygen-hemoglobin affinity and lower hemoglobin concentration. This observation has also been analyzed based on the oxygen supply from RBCs and the oxygen-hemoglobin reaction kinetics. The results and discussions presented in this article could be helpful for a better understanding of oxygen transport in microcirculation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]