Abstract
The free diameter of a red blood cell generally exceeds the lumen diameter of capillaries in the central nervous system, requiring significant cellular deformation. However, the deformations undertaken are not well established under natural conditions due to the difficulty in observing corpuscular flow in vivo. Here we describe a novel, to the best of our knowledge, method to noninvasively study the shape of red blood cells as they traverse the narrow capillary networks of the living human retina, using high-speed adaptive optics. One hundred and twenty-three capillary vessels were analyzed in three healthy subjects. For each capillary, image data were motion-compensated and then averaged over time to reveal the appearance of the blood column. Data from hundreds of red blood cells were used to profile the average cell in each vessel. Diverse cellular geometries were observed across lumens ranging from 3.2 to 8.4 µm in diameter. As capillaries narrowed, cells transitioned from rounder to more elongated shapes and from being counter-aligned to aligned with the axis of flow. Remarkably, in many vessels the red blood cells maintained an oblique orientation relative to the axis of flow.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Cited by
2 articles.
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