Red blood cell distribution in the hypothermic ground squirrel

1959 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 990-994 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. F. Lynch

The quantity and distribution of the circulating red blood cell mass were studied in the ground squirrel during immersion hypothermia of 2°–4°C esophageal temperature. Mixing of isotopically tagged erythrocytes within the total red cell mass, as determined by comparison with euthermic values, was essentially complete within 10 minutes, so that little, if any, sequestration of blood occurred. The hematocrit ratio of blood within the heart lumina was maintained throughout this cold stress. Complete mixing of Cr51-tagged red blood cells took place within 1 hour in the erythrocytes of the kidney, cardiac muscle, diaphragm and leg muscles. The liver of the cold animal picked up radioactivity, perhaps due to damage of erythrocytes in the labeling process. Splenic contraction within 2 hours of acute hypothermia was indicated by a sharp decrease in its circulating red blood cell mass and by visual observation. The total erythrocyte mass in the cheek pouch of the hypothermic ground squirrel required about 3 hours to equilibrate with labeled cells, so that a small region of very slowly flowing blood did exist in this tissue. Maintenance of red blood cell flow to tissues indicated that some vasomotor control was intact during this acute cold stress. Submitted on January 27, 1959

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3701-3701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kun Xu ◽  
Keith V. Holubec ◽  
John E. Love ◽  
Thomas J. Goodwin ◽  
Arthur J. Sytkowski

Abstract Humans and experimental animals subjected to microgravity, such as experienced during space flight, exhibit alterations in erythropoiesis, including changes in red blood cell morphology, survival and a reduction in red blood cell mass. Some of these alterations have been attributed to a disruption of normal in vivo erythropoietin physiology. However, human bone marrow cells grown on orbit showed a profound reduction in the number of erythroid cells, suggesting a cellular component. We now report the results of a study carried out on orbit on the International Space Station (ISS UF-1) in which an erythroid cell line was induced to differentiate. Rauscher murine erythroleukemia cells, a continuous cell line that can undergo erythropoietin (Epo)- or chemical-induced differentiation similar to normal erythropoiesis, were cultured for 6 days either in microgravity on board the ISS or on earth and then for 3 days in the absence or presence of 50 U Epo/ml or 0.7% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The cells were fixed, stored on orbit and returned to earth for study. Compared to ground-based controls, cells cultured in microgravity exhibited a greater degree of differentiation (hemoglobinization) (p<0.01). However, TER-119 antigen, a specific marker of the late stages of murine erythroid differentiation, was not detected on the surface of cells grown in microgravity. A significantly higher percentage (p<0.05) of cell clusters formed on orbit, whereas actin content appeared reduced. Furthermore, there was a more profound loss of actin stress fibers in microgravity following Epo or DMSO treatment. These results demonstrate abnormal erythropoiesis in vitro in microgravity and are consistent with the hypothesis that erythropoiesis is affected by gravitational forces at the cellular level.(Supported by NASA Grants NAG9-1368 and NAG2-1592 to AJS)


1993 ◽  
Vol 3 (10) ◽  
pp. 1653-1659
Author(s):  
M A Perazella ◽  
M J Bia

A case of posttransplant erythrocytosis in a 51-year-old diabetic man is described. This problem, which can occur in 5 to 15% of renal transplant patients, can result from a contracted plasma volume (diuretics, pressure natriuresis, or glycosuria) or from a true elevation in red blood cell mass. Once the diagnosis of true erythrocytosis is made by a radiolabeled red blood cell mass study, secondary causes such as hypoxia, liver disease, polycythemia rubra vera, renal artery stenosis, and cystic kidney disease should be excluded. Posttransplant erythrocytosis has only been observed in renal transplant recipients and appears to be more frequent with cyclosporine compared with azathioprine therapy. An inappropriately high level of erythropoietin has been described in some, but not all patients, suggesting stimulation of erythropoietin production as the mechanism. Posttransplant erythrocytosis can be associated with an increased incidence of thrombotic events. The presence of this potential complication has prompted intervention to maintain the hematocrit below 50 to 55%. Measures such as discontinuation of diuretics as well as better control of blood pressure and plasma glucose should be used to facilitate the correction of extracellular volume contraction. Phlebotomy has been the most accepted intervention to intermittently lower the hematocrit when needed, but this can lead to iron deficiency. Newer therapeutic modalities are now being used to treat the problem medically. Theophylline, which reduces adenosine-mediated erythropoietin synthesis, is effective but may be associated with side effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 26-26
Author(s):  
Matthew Duvernay ◽  
Breanne HY Gibson ◽  
Lydia Joy Mckeithan ◽  
Alexandra J. Borst ◽  
Jonathan Schoenecker

High blood loss requiring transfusion is a common complication in pediatric scoliosis surgery. Bleeding in patients undergoing spinal surgery is exacerbated by the development of coagulopathy in response to extensive activation of the acute phase response (APR). Coagulopathy is characterized by consumption of coagulation factors, inflammation, and hyperfibrinolysis. Although the administration of antifibrinolytics (e.g. tranexamic acid, TXA) has significantly reduced transfusions, patients still experience high rates of blood loss, suggesting either that TXA dosing needs optimization or that plasmin-independent aspects of coagulopathy could be driving bleeding. Major orthopedic surgeries are characterized by a reduction in platelet counts indicating the coagulopathic conditions of surgery exert a tropism on the circulating platelet population. Indeed, platelet dysfunction concomitant with trauma-induced coagulopathy has been extensively described in literature. Platelet dysfunction during adult orthopedic surgery has been observed but has not been correlated with bleeding, and platelet function in pediatric spine surgery has yet to be assessed. To determine if pediatric patients also experience platelet dysfunction, we measured platelet activation by whole blood flow cytometry during the course of scoliosis surgery in 8 pediatric patients. In parallel, circulating markers of the APR (i.e. IL-6, IL-10, IL-8), products of fibrinolysis (D-dimer), and indicators of consumptive coagulopathy (Protein C) were measured by multiplex ELISA. Samples were collected preoperatively (Preop), intraoperatively (every 2 hours, Intraop 1 and Intraop 2), immediately after closure (Postop) and the following morning (POD1). Samples were stimulated with submaximal concentrations of thrombin, convulxin (GPVI agonist, collagen receptor), and ADP. Platelet integrin activation was measured by PAC1 binding (GPIIbIIIa activation) and platelet secretion was measured by CD62p binding (P-selectin surface expression). We observed a progressive and statistically significant reduction in the platelet response (GPIIbIIIa activation and P-selectin expression) to both thrombin and convulxin stimulation during the procedure but with distinct temporal patterns. The reduction in response to thrombin became significant at Postop, remaining down even at POD1 (PAC1 max reduction, Postop 1: 32.5%, p=0.0403; P-selectin max reduction, POD1: 33.9%, p=0.016). The reduction in response to convulxin, on the other hand developed almost immediately after the initiation of surgery, starting with Intraop1 and resolving by Postop (PAC1 max reduction, Intraop 1: 25.1%, p=0.0087; P-selectin max reduction, Intraop 1: 18.3%, p=0.0369). Intra-operative responses to thrombin (both PAC1 and CD62p binding) significantly correlated with estimates of blood loss based on red blood cell mass (Estimated Red Blood Cell Mass, ERCM def) and hemoglobin mass (Hg mass loss) (see Table I below). Although we observed a consistent and statistically significant reduction in platelet number it correlated with blood loss at POD1 only, suggesting platelet function is a better predictor of blood loss than platelet count. Despite all patients receiving a bolus of TXA with continuous low dose infusion, multiplex results indicated a progressive increase in circulating D-dimer, becoming statistically significant at Postop and persisting through POD 1. Elevations in D-dimer, the byproduct of plasmin degradation of fibrin, suggest elusive fibrinolysis despite administration of TXA. Significant intraoperative elevations in IL-6, IL-10, and IL-8 and consumption of Protein C were also noted that persisted through POD1, indicating the development of coagulopathy. In conclusion, pediatric scoliosis surgery is characterized by persistent fibrinolysis platelet dysfunction, activation of the APR, and coagulopathy despite administration of the anti-fibrinolytic TXA. Future studies will focus on altering the dose of TXA to determine if an optimal dosing can be achieved that effectively inhibits fibrinolysis and answer important questions about the dependence of the APR and platelet hypofunction on the persistent fibrinolysis seen in these patients. Figure Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 207-212
Author(s):  
A. V. Deryugina ◽  
G. A. Boyarinov ◽  
I. S. Simutis ◽  
V. O. Nikolskiy ◽  
A. B. Kuznetsov ◽  
...  
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