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Circulating blood volume and its respiratory surface during craniocerebral hypothermia

  • Pathological Physiology and General Pathology
  • Published:
Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine Aims and scope

Abstract

The effect of local brain cooling on the circulating blood volume and its respiratory surface was studied in dogs. With a fall in the body temperature from 36 to 30°C the circulating blood volume and circulating erythrocyte volume increased. If cooling continued, these indices decreased. Plasma begins to leave the blood stream simultaneously with the beginning of exposure to cold. The respiratory surface of the blood increases with a fall in body temperature to 30°C, but decreases in response to further cooling.

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Penner, S.D. Circulating blood volume and its respiratory surface during craniocerebral hypothermia. Bull Exp Biol Med 83, 137–139 (1977). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00799402

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00799402

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