OOCL NT SOUACE : : Unversity of California at Berkeley The Bancroft Library/The Unversity Archives, Berkeley CA RECCADS SEAIES TITLE Kenneth Gargan ce Kepers BANC ROFTSUARC ID NO. Sco/ Bi COPY CARTON NO. i FOLOER NAME Be pacats NOTES gil £13 FOUND BY/D4TE FOUND Keres 195? -{7# 6 fe LL2 /94 RED CELL AND BLOOD VOLUME IN HEALTHY MEN: Cm consideration are revealed. That these may be obscured when calculated body surface area is used as the basis of prediction was pointed out many ‘vears ago by Rountree and Brown (1) and by Gibson and Evans'{2). For example, two heavy men are found to the far right of Figure 1. Although noticeably different trom the rest of the population when located'on the scatter diagram. they cannot be distinguished irom the other large individuals in our series when the data for Vrbe are plotted against body suriace area,-as shown in Figure 4. . Regression of \Vwb to height and weight accounted for only 36 per cent of the-eriginal variability of our data. The coefficient of variation 1075 on blood volume. This is probably because the blood content of fat tissue is not insignificant (5, 15). Hicks, Hope, Turnbull and Verel (14) found that consideration of fat thickness and girth in addition to height and weight lowered the coefficient of variation for Vwb from 9.6 to 7.6 per cent. Vwb, Vrbe and Vpl have been found to be directly related to body density (5, 15). and Muldowney (17) found a surprisingly good correlation between Vrbc and lean body mass, con- sidering that both were determined indirectly. On the other hand. Inkley, Brooks and Kreiger (16) found no better correlation between Vpl and. iean body mass, determined by densitometry or by antipyrine space, than benveen Vpl and total (8.1 per cent) after this regression is of about the — body mass. and Huff and Feller (15) were unsame inagnitude as has been found in other stuthes able to improve the prediction of blood volume after regression or correlation of blood volume -to by determining body density and calculating the tively more muscular and less obese than theirs. Most of the varia- tion to be accounted for after consideration of height and weight is biologic rather than metho- dologic, as shown by our repeat studies and by similar experiences reported by workers using a variety of methods, for example, P** (7, 12, 13). Cr? (10), 2" (15), and T-1824 (5, 13, 16). Within the population available to us for study. we have found that age, somatotype and habits of physical activity influence Vrbe and Vwb only slightly when considered independently from height and weight. This mav be because each of these characteristics is strongly linked in its effect on blood volume with body size and composition. The effect of each characteristic is of course mini- mized when examined by analysis of residuals about the height x weight regression. planes. Available evidence suggests that individual differences with respect to the content of fat and lean tissue in the body have only a modest effect In most other respects, our results are.in re-_ markably good agreement with those of the early - workers who used the-dye'methods. The'pasitive: aan FY correlation found betweenresiduals fot Virbe and: Vpl (r = + 0.42) m at a man ehgseVibe = is larger than average_for_his height and Geighe -. will also tend to have~a-térge Vol. ETBIFis ig - contrast to the inverse relation beuveen ¥r¥c find. Vpl found in certain pathologic states,?.g:, anemia and polycythemia (38), and suggests that the normal biologic determinants of tttod-volume may be concerned with circulatory volume rather than with total circulating hemoglobin. The apparent absence of age effect in the third to fifth decades is in agreement with several reports (6.8.13). The suggested tendencyfor the volumes per unit size to decrease in the sixth decade corroborates the findings of Gibson and Evans (2) and of Baker, Kozoll and Meyer (20). The question of age, however, requires further ab feapes, persons, but only a few examples of extremely The only apparent explanation: for the difference is that our large subjects were rela- a! We curvature. linear or obese body build. Cectal body surface area were flattened at the top. We have beerr-enable to corroborate this finding; tone of our regressian lines or planes show ecidance of - geneity, in that it included men from several raciai origins whose ages extended to above 50 years and included physically active as well as sedentary Ci curvesféfating volumes to height. weight and Vee average American medical students and considerably higher than ours in a group of subjects selected for extremes of somatotype (3). Our sample of adult males was of intermediate homo- The data of Gibson and Evans (2) appeared to show that blood volume per unit body ‘size was. less in large than in small subjects, so that thé Foay It was comparatively low in a group of ‘hen Geer, tion. expected blood content of fat and lean tissues separately. the The mag- nitude of the coefficient depends on the homogeneity and size of the population under investiga- Yee. weight and height or to surface area,