Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)

It was shown in the first part of the review that the alterations of systemic hemodynamics and microcirculation in acute blood loss led to the development of metabolic disorders and cell damage. The second part of the review highlights the methods of microcirculation and tissue oxygenation investiga...

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Main Authors: V. V. Moroz, I. A. Ryzhkov
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Russian Academy of Medical Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:Obŝaâ Reanimatologiâ
Subjects:
ldf
Online Access:https://www.reanimatology.com/rmt/article/view/1555
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spelling doaj-8ddc1fbc1f524c21b6ddf37c6a80525c2021-07-28T21:21:56ZrusRussian Academy of Medical SciencesObŝaâ Reanimatologiâ1813-97792411-71102017-01-01125659410.15360/1813-9779-2016-5-65-941529Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)V. V. Moroz0I. A. Ryzhkov1V. A. Negovsky Research Institute of General ReanimatologyV. A. Negovsky Research Institute of General ReanimatologyIt was shown in the first part of the review that the alterations of systemic hemodynamics and microcirculation in acute blood loss led to the development of metabolic disorders and cell damage. The second part of the review highlights the methods of microcirculation and tissue oxygenation investigation. The focus is on modern biomicroscopy varieties and methods based on the laser technology. In particular, we discuss a method based on the mathematical analysis of microvascular blood flow oscillations (fluxmotion) to evaluate the regulatory mechanisms of microcirculation. The features of regional blood flow and microcirculation in different vascular regions of the body in acute blood loss, as well as during the subsequent reperfusion are considered. It was shown that microcirculatory alterations in a particular organ are largely determined by the structural and functional features of its blood supply, as well as by the role of this organ in the pathogenesis of acute blood loss. These changes can possess both adaptive and pathological significance depending on blood loss stage and severity.https://www.reanimatology.com/rmt/article/view/1555acute blood lossreperfusionmicrocirculationvasomotionfluxmotionregional blood flowldfvideomicroscopy
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author V. V. Moroz
I. A. Ryzhkov
spellingShingle V. V. Moroz
I. A. Ryzhkov
Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)
Obŝaâ Reanimatologiâ
acute blood loss
reperfusion
microcirculation
vasomotion
fluxmotion
regional blood flow
ldf
videomicroscopy
author_facet V. V. Moroz
I. A. Ryzhkov
author_sort V. V. Moroz
title Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)
title_short Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)
title_full Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)
title_fullStr Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)
title_full_unstemmed Acute Blood Loss: Regional Blood Flow and Microcirculation (Review, Part II)
title_sort acute blood loss: regional blood flow and microcirculation (review, part ii)
publisher Russian Academy of Medical Sciences
series Obŝaâ Reanimatologiâ
issn 1813-9779
2411-7110
publishDate 2017-01-01
description It was shown in the first part of the review that the alterations of systemic hemodynamics and microcirculation in acute blood loss led to the development of metabolic disorders and cell damage. The second part of the review highlights the methods of microcirculation and tissue oxygenation investigation. The focus is on modern biomicroscopy varieties and methods based on the laser technology. In particular, we discuss a method based on the mathematical analysis of microvascular blood flow oscillations (fluxmotion) to evaluate the regulatory mechanisms of microcirculation. The features of regional blood flow and microcirculation in different vascular regions of the body in acute blood loss, as well as during the subsequent reperfusion are considered. It was shown that microcirculatory alterations in a particular organ are largely determined by the structural and functional features of its blood supply, as well as by the role of this organ in the pathogenesis of acute blood loss. These changes can possess both adaptive and pathological significance depending on blood loss stage and severity.
topic acute blood loss
reperfusion
microcirculation
vasomotion
fluxmotion
regional blood flow
ldf
videomicroscopy
url https://www.reanimatology.com/rmt/article/view/1555
work_keys_str_mv AT vvmoroz acutebloodlossregionalbloodflowandmicrocirculationreviewpartii
AT iaryzhkov acutebloodlossregionalbloodflowandmicrocirculationreviewpartii
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