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BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.

Blood volume tests made by the vital red method (Keith, Rowntree, and Geraghty) on patients after hemorrhage showed a marked reduction in the total blood bulk. Not uncommonly the blood volume was less than 60 per cent of the normal. The reduction after a certain point had been reached seemed to para...

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Autores principales: Robertson, Oswald H., Bock, Arlie V.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1919
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2126315/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19868310
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author Robertson, Oswald H.
Bock, Arlie V.
author_facet Robertson, Oswald H.
Bock, Arlie V.
author_sort Robertson, Oswald H.
collection PubMed
description Blood volume tests made by the vital red method (Keith, Rowntree, and Geraghty) on patients after hemorrhage showed a marked reduction in the total blood bulk. Not uncommonly the blood volume was less than 60 per cent of the normal. The reduction after a certain point had been reached seemed to parallel the decrease in blood pressure. This relation of diminished blood volume to low pressure suggested a rough method of estimating blood volume from the change in blood pressure. By means of the blood volume and the hemoglobin per cent the actual amount of blood loss was determined. Cases of severe anemia showed a loss of as much as five-sixths of their total hemoglobin. Progressive changes in blood volume following hemorrhage were estimated in three ways: (1) repeated vital red tests; (2) calculation from changes in hemoglobin per cent produced by the injection of gum acacia; (3) calculation from changes in hemoglobin per cent following the dilution of the blood by the patient's own body fluids. The effects of the different methods of transfusion and of injection of gum acacia on blood volume were observed. No differences were apparent. It was found that transfusion and gum injections only partially restored the blood volume. Forced fluids by mouth were found to bring about its complete restoration in a comparatively short time. It was observed that the organism did not restore its blood volume beyond a certain point when a further increase in it would, by dilution, have brought the hemoglobin per cent to a very low figure. In such cases a further increase of the blood volume occurred only when the hemoglobin rose. In cases with a low hemoglobin per cent as the result of a restoration of the blood bulk an abnormally high blood pressure appeared, which continued until the hemoglobin per cent again increased. Accompanying the low blood pressure seen shortly after hemorrhage was a well marked difference in hemoglobin per cent between capillary and venous blood, with a relative concentration on the capillary side. As compensation occurred and blood pressure rose this difference lessened until the two readings were identical, indicating an even redistribution of the red blood cells. Reticulated red cell counts made in these cases showed that a marked bone marrow stimulation occurs after hemorrhage. However, except in the very anemic cases the degree of increased blood production seemed to depend largely on the restoration of the blood volume. The patients who were put on forced fluids, with consequent rapid restoration of blood volume, showed a much higher per cent of reticulated cells than those in whom no attempt was made to increase the amount of fluid in circulation.
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spelling pubmed-21263152008-04-18 BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE. Robertson, Oswald H. Bock, Arlie V. J Exp Med Article Blood volume tests made by the vital red method (Keith, Rowntree, and Geraghty) on patients after hemorrhage showed a marked reduction in the total blood bulk. Not uncommonly the blood volume was less than 60 per cent of the normal. The reduction after a certain point had been reached seemed to parallel the decrease in blood pressure. This relation of diminished blood volume to low pressure suggested a rough method of estimating blood volume from the change in blood pressure. By means of the blood volume and the hemoglobin per cent the actual amount of blood loss was determined. Cases of severe anemia showed a loss of as much as five-sixths of their total hemoglobin. Progressive changes in blood volume following hemorrhage were estimated in three ways: (1) repeated vital red tests; (2) calculation from changes in hemoglobin per cent produced by the injection of gum acacia; (3) calculation from changes in hemoglobin per cent following the dilution of the blood by the patient's own body fluids. The effects of the different methods of transfusion and of injection of gum acacia on blood volume were observed. No differences were apparent. It was found that transfusion and gum injections only partially restored the blood volume. Forced fluids by mouth were found to bring about its complete restoration in a comparatively short time. It was observed that the organism did not restore its blood volume beyond a certain point when a further increase in it would, by dilution, have brought the hemoglobin per cent to a very low figure. In such cases a further increase of the blood volume occurred only when the hemoglobin rose. In cases with a low hemoglobin per cent as the result of a restoration of the blood bulk an abnormally high blood pressure appeared, which continued until the hemoglobin per cent again increased. Accompanying the low blood pressure seen shortly after hemorrhage was a well marked difference in hemoglobin per cent between capillary and venous blood, with a relative concentration on the capillary side. As compensation occurred and blood pressure rose this difference lessened until the two readings were identical, indicating an even redistribution of the red blood cells. Reticulated red cell counts made in these cases showed that a marked bone marrow stimulation occurs after hemorrhage. However, except in the very anemic cases the degree of increased blood production seemed to depend largely on the restoration of the blood volume. The patients who were put on forced fluids, with consequent rapid restoration of blood volume, showed a much higher per cent of reticulated cells than those in whom no attempt was made to increase the amount of fluid in circulation. The Rockefeller University Press 1919-01-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2126315/ /pubmed/19868310 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1919, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Robertson, Oswald H.
Bock, Arlie V.
BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.
title BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.
title_full BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.
title_fullStr BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.
title_full_unstemmed BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.
title_short BLOOD VOLUME IN WOUNDED SOLDIERS : I. BLOOD VOLUME AND RELATED BLOOD CHANGES AFTER HEMORRHAGE.
title_sort blood volume in wounded soldiers : i. blood volume and related blood changes after hemorrhage.
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2126315/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19868310
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