Evidence that rehydrated, lyophilized red blood cells are sufficiently deformable for normal microcirculation transit.

Autor: Fischer TH; Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Francis Owen Blood Research Laboratory, 350 S. Old Fayetteville Rd., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27516, USA. tfischer@med.unc.edu, Robbins ME, Bode AP, Nichols TC, Bellinger DE, Schoenfisch MH
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Microscopy research and technique [Microsc Res Tech] 2004 Sep; Vol. 65 (1-2), pp. 62-71.
DOI: 10.1002/jemt.20106
Abstrakt: A method was developed for the preparation of rehydratable lyophilized red blood cells (RL RBCs) that hold promise as cell-based oxygen carriers for transfusion medicine. The maintenance of normal cellular deformability is essential for the successful development of cell-based oxygen delivery systems. Improper deformability of RBCs can lead to hemolysis if too fragile or microvascular occlusion if too rigid. We developed an aldehyde stabilization method that is based on the use of paraformaldehyde polymers that complement the function of spectrin as a structural unit with conformational flexibility. Three types of in vitro deformability studies (filter transit, pipette aspiration, and atomic force microscopy) and in vivo intravital microscopy were performed to characterize the deformability of RL RBCs. When considered with safety data from previously reported studies in dogs, the results of these studies indicate that paraformaldehyde-modified RL RBCs have visco-elastic deformability properties that are in the nonpathological range.
(Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
Databáze: MEDLINE