Jacqueline E Vigilance
University of the West Indies
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jacqueline E Vigilance.
Microcirculation | 2011
Melissa Kb Georgi; Jacqueline E Vigilance; Anthony M. Dewar; Mary D. Frame
Please cite this paper as: Georgi, Vigilance, Dewar, and Frame (2011). Terminal Arteriolar Network Structure/Function and Plasma Cytokine Levels in db/db and ob/ob Mouse Skeletal Muscle. Microcirculation 18(3), 238–251.
Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications | 2008
Jacqueline E Vigilance; Harvey L Reid
Vascular abnormalities are more prevalent in the lower extremities in diabetic patients and may cause diminished perfusion to surrounding tissues. We sought to identify blood flow abnormalities in the leg of diabetic patients with peripheral occlusive arterial disease (POAD) and to determine whether these were associated with abnormalities in rheological determinants, namely, plasma fibrinogen concentration (PFC), relative plasma viscosity (RPV), hematocrit (Hct), and whole blood viscosity (WBV). Seventeen diabetic patients with POAD were compared with 40 diabetic patients without POAD and 19 nondiabetic control subjects. Blood flow was measured by venous occlusion plethysmography, RPV was measured by capillary viscometry, WBV was measured by a Wells-Brooksfield viscometer [at high (230 s(-1)) and low (23 s(-1)) shear rates], and PFC was measured by the clot-weight method of Ingram [Ingram, G. I. C. (1961). A suggested schedule for the rapid investigation of acute haemostatic failure. Journal of Clinical Pathology, 14, 356-360]. Ankle blood flow (Q(ak)) was significantly lower in diabetic patients with POAD than in diabetic patients without POAD (P<.05). PFC was higher and Hct was lower in diabetic patients with POAD than in diabetic patients without POAD (P<.05). RPV was 1.97+/-0.15 versus 1.92+/-0.15 in diabetic patients with POAD and diabetic patients without POAD, respectively (P>.05). There was no significant difference in WBV at low or high shear rates between the groups studied. There was a correlation between WBV at low shear rate and arterial flow in the calf (Q(c)) (r=.94) and great toe (r=.95) in diabetic patients with POAD, and between Q(c) and WBV at high (r=-.465) and low (r=-.472) shear rates in diabetic patients without POAD (P<.05). We conclude that vasodilatation occurring in diabetic patients without POAD is severely restricted or absent in diabetic patients with POAD. Increased plasma fibrinogen and plasma viscosity may contribute to this phenomenon.
Clinical Science | 2000
Junette S. Mohan; Jacqueline E Vigilance; Janice M. Marshall; Ian R. Hambleton; Harvey L Reid; Graham R Serjeant
Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation | 2005
Jacqueline E Vigilance; Harvey L Reid
West Indian Medical Journal | 2000
Harvey L Reid; Jacqueline E Vigilance; Wright-Pascoe R; Eric Choo-Kang
Archives of Medical Research | 2005
Jacqueline E Vigilance; Harvey L Reid
West Indian Medical Journal | 1999
Jacqueline E Vigilance; Harvey L Reid; Richards-George P
Journal of Global Oncology | 2018
Jacqueline E Vigilance; Heather Harewood; Natalie Greaves
The FASEB Journal | 2014
Jacqueline E Vigilance; Mary D. Frame
The FASEB Journal | 2009
Mary D. Frame; Jacqueline E Vigilance