Theory of filtration of mixed blood suspensions

Biorheology ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Skalak ◽  
L. Soslowsky ◽  
E. Schmalzer ◽  
T. Impelluso ◽  
S. Chien
2016 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-22
Author(s):  
Anne F. Hyde

This essay, a revised version of the August 2015 talk, examines the story of two mixed-blood women, indigenous and Anglo American, who lived in the fur trade North American West. The essay examines a racial category, mixed blood or “half-breed” and considers the challenges for people who lived in and used that category in the nineteenth century. The essay illuminates the challenges of using different kinds of personal records to understand how these nineteenth-century women might have thought about identity, a word they never would have used.


2021 ◽  
Vol 102 (s1) ◽  
pp. s199-s214
Author(s):  
J.R. Miller
Keyword(s):  

Although miscegenation must have been one of the earliest and most common effects of the expansion of Europe, its consequences have been relatively little studied by historians of Canada. Indeed, one of the few general histories of the western mixed-blood population suggests – only half-jokingly, one suspects – that the Métis people of Canada were founded nine months after the landing of the first European. Perhaps because of traditional historiographical emphases, a limited methodological sophistication, or simply as a consequence of racist inhibitions on the part of Euro-Canadian historians who dominated the field until recently, the history of the Métis has not received much concerted and systematic attention from academic historians.


Author(s):  
Alejandra Parada ◽  
Magdalena Araya ◽  
Francisco Pérez-Bravo ◽  
Marco Méndez ◽  
Adriana Mimbacas ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Haifen Zhang ◽  
Shuhui Lailan ◽  
Shiyu Zhao ◽  
Qian Liu ◽  
Nina Fang ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Portable blood glucose meters are the main method for detecting the blood glucose status of clinical patients. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the accuracy of detecting blood glucose in haemodialysis patients by sampling two blood glucose meters through the haemodialysis line. METHODS: Convenient sampling was used to select 80 patients with maintenance haemodialysis. The patients were sampled through the arterial end of the haemodialysis line within three minutes of being put on the machine. One specimen was tested by glycemeter1, which can identify the type of blood in the arteries and veins, and glycemeter2, which can only detect blood glucose in the capillaries for bedside blood glucose testing. The other specimen was sent to the laboratory biochemical analyser for blood glucose testing. RESULTS: When the blood glucose value of the first blood glucose meter (No. 1) was compared with the laboratory biochemical analyser, the correlation coefficient was r = 0.805 (p < 0.05), the out of value of the first blood glucose meter accounted for 4.4%, and the consistency reached 95% (p < 0.05). When the blood glucose value of the second blood glucose meter (No. 2) was compared with the laboratory biochemical analyser, the correlation coefficient was r = 0.800 (p < 0.05), the out of value of the second blood glucose meter accounted for 4.4%, and the consistency reached 95% (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: For patients with maintenance haemodialysis, the blood glucose values detected by the two bedside blood glucose meters using arteriovenous mixed blood in the pipeline do not affect the accuracy and can respond more realistically.


Blood ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 70 (5) ◽  
pp. 1692-1695 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Bretagne ◽  
M Vidaud ◽  
M Kuentz ◽  
C Cordonnier ◽  
T Henni ◽  
...  

Abstract We have used DNA sequence polymorphism analysis to document engraftment after T cell-depleted bone marrow transplantation (BMT), with a selected panel of four DNA probes. In contrast to nondepleted BMT recipients, the patients who received T cell-depleted marrow exhibited a mixed blood chimerism. This mosaicism was observed before graft failure or relapse in six patients. However, in five other patients, this mixed chimerism was not followed by these complications with a follow-up of 9 to 31 months after transplantation. Our results support the hypothesis that transplanted bone marrow T cells may help to maintain engraftment by eliminating host cells that can cause graft failure.


Blood ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne L. Rassiga-Pidot ◽  
Gibbons G. Cornwell ◽  
O. Ross McIntyre

Abstract A persistent elevation of the fetal hemoglobin (Hgb F) level (5%-15%) was observed in a 22-yr-old white male with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). Acid treatment of the peripheral smear (Betke-Kleihauer technique) demonstrated a heterogeneous distribution of Hgb F in the red cells. As expected, the lowest acetylcholinesterase activity and the most hemolysis after acid stress were found in the low-density, reticulocyte-rich cell fraction. In contrast, the highest Hgb F levels were found in the high-density, reticulocyte-poor fraction. Further evidence for the segregation of these two abnormalties was obtained from the observation that less Hgb F was present in the hemolysate obtained after acid lysis than was present in the mixed blood sample or the remaining nonhemolyzed red cells.


MANUSYA ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 66-82
Author(s):  
Suthachai Yimprasert
Keyword(s):  

In the kingdom of Arakan, there were thousands of pure and mixed-blood Portuguese staying as freebooters, mercenaries, and merchants. They became mercenaries for the king of Arakan. Some of them rose to obtain important status. The main example was Filipe de Brito who became lord of Syriam from 1602 to 1613. The other one was Sebastião Gonçalves Tibau who became the pirate king of Sandwip from 1609. Although the king of Arakan defeated him in 1617, piracy did not cease until they were suppressed in 1666 because the king of Arakan himself supported the Portuguese pirates and employed them to make trouble for the Moghuls in Bengal.


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