Studies of blood flow in mesentery, cremaster muscle, and small bore glass tubes were performed to obtain a relationship between mean velocity ( V mean) and red cell velocity using the two-slit method under epifluorescence ( V epi) and transillumination ( V trans) microscopy. The velocities V epi and V trans obtained in vivo for 47 measurements in arterioles and venules (12- to 51-μm internal diameter) were linearly related by V epi = 0.83 V trans + 0.074, and the ratio V epi V trans decreased gradually with increasing vessel diameter ( P ⩽ 0.05). In vitro studies in tapered glass tubes (diameter 30–70 μm) were conducted for feed hematocrits ( H F) from 10 to 40%. Under transillumination, V trans V mean was nearly constant with an average of 1.56 ± 0.16 (SD) for all hematocrits and diameters. The velocity ratio, V epi V mean , however, decreased with H F from 1.8 to 0.8 as H F was increased from 10 to 40%. Theoretical considerations suggest that the variations of V epi V mean with tube hematocrit and diameter might result from attenuation of the excitation light by absorption and scattering by red cells, and also due to a finite depth of field of the microscope objective.
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