Abstract
Blood viscosity (shear rates 100s-1 and 0.94 s-1) and several of its major determinants (haematocrit, plasma fibrinogen and plasma viscosity) have been measured in 38 male insulin-treated diabetics, aged 18-50 years, and in 38 non-diabetic control subjects matched for age and smoking habit. Diabetics without fundoscopic retinopathy (n=20) had higher mean blood viscosity than controls at the high shear rate (7.07 cP vs 6.75 cP, p<0.05) and the low shear rate (21.2 cP vs 18.7 cP, p<0.025). These differences persisted after correction of blood viscosity to a standard haematocrit, and were associated with increased plasma viscosity (1.41 cP vs 1.34 cP, p<0.025) and plasma fibrinogen (2.9 g/L vs. 2.5 g/L, p<0.025). Diabetics with retinopathy (n=18) had higher mean blood viscosity than diabetics without retinopathy at the high shear rate (7.53 cP vs 7.07 cP, p<0.05) and the low shear rate (24.3 cP vs. 21.2 cP, p<0.05), associated with a higher haematocrit (p<0.05). Blood viscosity and haematocrit correlated with the duration of diabetes (r>0.32, p<0.05). © 1980 Springer-Verlag.
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Lowe, G. D. O., Lowe, J. M., Drummond, M. M., Reith, S., Belch, J. J. F., Kesson, C. M., … Manderson, W. G. (1980). Blood viscosity in young male diabetics with and without retinopathy. Diabetologia, 18(5), 359–363. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00276814
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