4.2 Article

An analytical model for solute transport from blood to tissue

Journal

OPEN PHYSICS
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages 249-258

Publisher

DE GRUYTER POLAND SP Z O O
DOI: 10.1515/phys-2022-0026

Keywords

mass transfer; blood flow; tissue; Krogh cylinder; marginal zone theory

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In narrow tubes, red blood cells concentrate in the core region, leaving a cell-free layer. This affects the tube hematocrit level and the apparent blood viscosity. Blood flow, mass transfer, and diffusion influence solute concentration profiles. The Krogh tissue cylinder concept and the marginal zone concept are used to model solute transfer from blood to tissues. The model considers advection, diffusion, membrane transport, and tissue diffusion and reaction. The present study provides an analytical solution and can be extended to other kinetic models, accounting for Fahraeus and Fahraeus-Lindqvist effects. The model is validated for glucose transport.
For narrow tubes, red blood cells concentrate in the core region, leaving an annular zone called cell-free layer. This has an impact on both the tube hematocrit level (Fahraeus effect) and the apparent blood viscosity (Fahraeus-Lindqvist effect). Blood flow, mass transfer across the microvessel membrane, and diffusion in the tissue affect the solute concentration profiles. The Krogh tissue cylinder concept, limiting mass transfer to a cylinder around each microvessel, and the marginal zone concept (introduced by Haynes to analyze blood flow dynamics in narrow tubes) are both used to develop a model for solute transfer from blood in microvessels to the surrounding tissues, based on fundamentals. The analysis accounts for advection and diffusion in each zone of the microvessel, solute transport in the microvessel membranes, and diffusion and reaction in the tissues. The present investigation provides an analytical solution. The approach can be extended to treat other kinetic models, while accounting for Fahraeus and Fahraeus-Lindqvist effects in blood microvessels. The model is validated against published results for glucose transport from blood to tissue.

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