Measurement of the distribution of red blood cell deformability using an automated rheoscope
โ Scribed by J. G. G. Dobbe; G. J. Streekstra; M. R. Hardeman; C. Ince; C. A. Grimbergen
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 385 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0196-4763
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Background:
Red blood cells (rbcs) have to deform markedly to pass through the smallest capillaries of the microcirculation. techniques for measuring rbc deformability often result in an indication of the mean value. a deformability distribution would be more useful for studying diseases that are marked by subpopulations of less deformable cells because even small fractions of rigid cells can cause circulatory problems.
Methods:
We present an automated rheoscope that uses advanced image analysis techniques to determine a rbc deformability distribution (rbc-dd) by analyzing a large number of individual cells in shear flow. the sensitivity was measured from density-separated fractions of one blood sample and from cells rendered less deformable by heat treatment. a preliminary experiment included the rbc-dds of a patient with sickle cell anemia, one on dialysis and being treated with erythropoietin, and one with elliptocytosis.
Results:
Measurement of the rbc-dd was highly reproducible. the sensitivity test showed markedly different deformability distributions of density-separated cells and yielded distinct rbc-dds after each additional minute of heat treatment.
Conclusion:
The automated rheoscope enabled the determination of rbc-dds from which less deformable subpopulations can be established. the shape of an rbc-dd may be valuable in assessing cell fractions with normal and anomalous deformability within pathologic blood samples.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The kinematics of an area-conserving tank-treading disk-shaped red blood cell membrane is studied using the stream function method suggested by Secomb and Skalak (Q. Jl Mech. appl. Math. 35, Pt 2, 233-247, 1982). Two simple area-conserving velocity fields are superimposed to satisfy the continuity c
## Abstract A major side effect of ribavirin (RBV) treatment is anemia. While this anemia is thought to result from increased RBC turnover, RBC survival has not been determined in subjects receiving RBV due to the complexity of the techniques commonly used to quantitate RBC life span. We recently d