Abstract

Deformability of erythrocyte was found to fundamentally alter the wetting dynamics of red blood cell (RBC) suspensions during their invasion into capillaries. Normal RBC suspensions failed to penetrate more than 1 cm into a glass capillary when the capillary radius was smaller than a critical value that is dependent on the erythrocyte concentration (about 50 microm for whole blood). In contrast, suspensions of rigidified RBCs, after cross-linking with different concentrations of glutaraldehyde or incubating with 100 ng/mL of an endotoxin, could penetrate any capillary larger than the erythrocyte dimension. The effect of RBC deformability on penetration was attributed to the enhanced shear-induced migration of normal deformable RBCs toward the capillary centreline, which imparted a higher average velocity to the RBCs than the average plasma velocity. As a result, the erythrocytes advanced into the capillary faster than the wetting meniscus, packing behind it to form a concentrated slug. This tightly packed slug had a high hydrodynamic resistance that could arrest the penetrating flow of concentrated suspensions into the small capillaries.

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