Whole blood viscosity and cerebral blood flow velocities in obese hypertensive or obese normotensive adolescents.
Date
2018-03-28Author
Akcaboy, Meltem
Nazliel, Bijen
Goktas, Tayfun
Kula, Serdar
Celik, Bulent
Buyan, Necla
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Abstract
Background: Obesity affects all major organ systems and leads to increased morbidity and mortality. Whole blood
viscosity is an important independent regulator of cerebral blood flow. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the
effect of whole blood viscosity on cerebral artery blood flow velocities using transcranial Doppler ultrasound in pediatric patients with obesity compared to healthy controls and analyze the effect of whole blood viscosity and blood pressure status to the cerebral artery blood flow velocities.
Methods: Sixty patients with obesity diagnosed according to their body mass index (BMI) percentiles aged 13–18 years old were prospectively enrolled. They were grouped as hypertensive or normotensive according to their ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. Whole blood viscosity and middle cerebral artery velocities by transcranial Doppler ultrasound were studied and compared to 20 healthy same aged controls.
Results: Whole blood viscosity values in hypertensive (0.0619 ± 0.0077 poise) and normotensive (0.0607 ± 0.0071
poise) groups were higher than controls (0.0616 ± 0.0064 poise), with no significance. Middle cerebral artery
blood flow velocities were higher in the obese hypertensive (73.9 ± 15.0 cm/s) and obese normotensive groups (75.2 ± 13.5 cm/s) than controls (66.4 ± 11.5 cm/s), but with no statistical significance.
Conclusions: Physiological changes in blood viscosity and changes in blood pressure did not seem to have any direct
effect on cerebral blood flow velocities, the reason might be that the cerebral circulation is capable of adaptively
modulating itself to changes to maintain a uniform cerebral blood flow.
Keywords: adolescents; cerebral blood flow; children; hypertension; obesity; whole blood viscosity.
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