Journal of theoretical biology
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A compartmental model is developed for oxygen (O(2)) transport in brain microcirculation in the presence of blood substitutes (hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers). The cerebrovascular bed is represented as a series of vascular compartments, on the basis of diameters, surrounded by a tissue compartment. A mixture of red blood cells (RBC) and plasma/extracellular hemoglobin solution flows through the vascular bed from the arterioles through the capillaries to the venules. ⋯ O(2) affinity of the extracellular hemoglobin is increased, the flow rate of the mixture decreases, hematocrit decreases at constant flow, metabolic rate increases, and intravascular transport resistance in the arterioles is neglected; (b) precapillary PO(2) gradients are not sensitive to (i) intracapillary transport resistance, (ii) cooperativity (n(p)) of hemoglobin with oxygen in plasma, (iii) hemoglobin concentration in the plasma and (iv) hematocrit when accounting for viscosity variation in the flow; (c) tissue PO(2) is not sensitive to the variation of intravascular transport resistance in the arterioles. We also found that tissue PO(2) is a non-monotonic function of the Hill coefficient n(p) for the extracellular hemoglobin with a maximum occurring when n(p) equals the blood Hill coefficient. The results of the computations give estimates of the magnitudes of the increases in tissue PO(2) as arterial PO(2) increases,P(50 p) increases, flow rate increases, hematocrit increases, hemoglobin concentration in the plasma increases, metabolic rate decreases, the capillary mass transfer coefficient increases or the intracapillary transport resistance decreases.