Blood samples collected under venous oxygen pressure from patients with sickle cell disease contain a significant number of a new type of reversibly sickled cells: constancy of the percentage of sickled cells in individual patients during steady state
Autor: | Toshio Asakura, Julian Mattiello, Kazuo Obata, Samir K. Ballas, Kenji Asakura |
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Rok vydání: | 2005 |
Předmět: |
Hemolytic anemia
Adult Male medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent chemistry.chemical_element Erythrocytes Abnormal Anemia Sickle Cell Oxygen Andrology Blood cell Internal medicine medicine Humans Aged Blood Specimen Collection Hematology business.industry Oxygenation Venous blood Middle Aged medicine.disease Sickle cell anemia Hemoglobinopathy medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry Immunology Erythrocyte Count Female business Biomarkers |
Zdroj: | American journal of hematology. 80(4) |
ISSN: | 0361-8609 |
Popis: | We found various levels of a new type of reversibly sickled cell (RSC) with blunt edges in 44 blood samples obtained from 32 steady-state patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) without exposure to air (UnExp-blood). Because these RSCs could be generated in vitro by partial oxygenation of once-deoxygenated SS cells to venous oxygen pressure, we named them “partially oxygenated sickled cells” (POSCs). These RSCs were classified into elongated and non-elongated RSCs, depending on the ratio of the short axis to long axis. The presence of these cells was previously unknown because the standard blood collection method oxygenates most of the POSCs to discocytes due to oxygen in the air space in the needle, syringe, and blood collection tube (Exp-blood). Although the shape of elongated POSCs is similar to that of irreversibly sickled cells (ISCs), POSCs revert to discocytes upon exposure to air. We found the following: (1) the percentage of total sickled cells (total POSCs + ISCs) in UnExp-blood (29.0 ± 14.5%) was significantly higher than the percentage of sickled cells (mainly ISCs) in Exp-blood (7.3 ± 5.7%); (2) the percentage of sickled cells in UnExp-blood was specific to individual patients during steady state, while it decreased at the onset of a vaso-occlusive event; and (3) the percentage of sickled cells in UnExp-blood varied widely among steady-state patients (4–56%). This new type of RSC may be used as an internal biomarker to evaluate the disease state of individual patients. Am. J. Hematol. 80:249–256, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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