scholarly journals Fine Structure of the Red Pulp of the Spleen in Hereditary Spherocytosis

Blood ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZELMA MOLNAR ◽  
HENRY RAPPAPORT

Abstract The spleens from two children and one adult with hereditary spherocytosis were studied in the electron microscope. Stagnation of the erythrocytes within the splenic cords is attributable to their lack of plasticity as evidenced by the absence of bilobed, tailed, or squeezed forms in transit through the walls of the sinuses. In contrast to the sections studied by conventional light microscopy, the splenic sinuses in hereditary spherocytosis were not "empty," but contained red blood cells, the majority of which had lost their hemoglobin content. Cordal macrophages were increased in all three cases and were abundant in the splenic cords of the adult patient, causing a further impediment to the rapid passage of erythrocytes. Macrophages, and, to a lesser degree, sinus endothelial cells contained the products of hemoglobin breakdown. The macrophages showed active erythrophagocytosis. Sinus endothelial cells rarely contained intact red blood cells, but showed pronounced pinocytotic activity, a probable mechanism of hemoglobin incorporation. Platelets within the endothelial cells of the sinuses were much more frequently seen in the three cases of hereditary spherocytosis than in control spleens. The presence of ferritin in platelets suggests that they too may play a role in clearing the end products of hemolysis from the spleen.

2006 ◽  
Vol 70B (6) ◽  
pp. 432-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Butthep ◽  
S. Wanram ◽  
K. Pattanapanyasat ◽  
P. Vattanaviboon ◽  
S. Fucharoen ◽  
...  

1957 ◽  
Vol 189 (3) ◽  
pp. 520-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard N. Halpern ◽  
G. Biozzi ◽  
B. Benacerraf ◽  
C. Stiffel

The clearance rate of nucleated pigeon erythrocytes injected intravenously into mice and rats has been calculated either by routine differential red cell counts or by measuring the radioactivity of the erythrocytes tagged with P32. Histological evidence is given that the foreign erythrocytes are phagocytized by the reticulo-endothelial cells of the liver and spleen. The clearance rate of the foreign erythrocytes, which measures the speed of the phagocytosis, follows in mice a regular exponential function similar to this previously established for other colloids. No spontaneous antibodies to pigeon erythrocytes could be detected in mice. The rapid and complex clearance rate of pigeon erythrocytes observed in rats is related to the existence of spontaneous specific antibodies. The simultaneous injection of pigeon erythrocytes and of India ink into mice, both phagocytized by the RE cells, results in a competition between the two substances in favor of the smaller particles of carbon.


1988 ◽  
Vol 36 (10) ◽  
pp. 1341-1351 ◽  
Author(s):  
E A Schenk ◽  
R W Waag ◽  
A B Schenk ◽  
J P Aubuchon

We used a scanning acoustic microscope to image normal and outdated red blood cells, cells with different hemoglobin content, red cell ghosts, and cells treated with various drugs that induce echinocyte-stomatocyte transformation. Images were obtained at different planes of focus within the cells, corresponding to maxima and minima of signal intensity. Digitization and gray scale amplitude mapping were used to create axonometric plots that display signal amplitude variations within the cells. The images of red cells contain features produced by differences in topology, density, elasticity, and absorption. Both hemoglobin content and the cell cytoskeleton contribute to image features, and various deformations, characterized by the formation of blebs and vacuoles, are displayed in cells undergoing echinocyte-stomatocyte transformation. These preliminary findings, although mainly descriptive, indicate that acoustic microscopy may be a useful new method for evaluating red cell deformation and associated changes in mechanical properties.


2009 ◽  
Vol 101 (03) ◽  
pp. 439-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Burnier ◽  
Pierre Fontana ◽  
Brenda R. Kwak ◽  
Anne Angelillo-Scherrer

SummaryConsiderable interest for cell-derived microparticles has emerged, pointing out their essential role in haemostatic response and their potential as disease markers, but also their implication in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes. They derive from different cell types including platelets – the main source of microparticles – but also from red blood cells, leukocytes and endothelial cells, and they circulate in blood. Despite difficulties encountered in analyzing them and disparities of results obtained with a wide range of methods, microparticle generation processes are now better understood. However, a generally admitted definition of microparticles is currently lacking. For all these reasons we decided to review the literature regarding microparticles in their widest definition, including ectosomes and exosomes, and to focus mainly on their role in haemostasis and vascular medicine.


2001 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabetta Cenni ◽  
Gabriela Ciapetti ◽  
Donatella Granchi ◽  
Susanna Stea ◽  
Lucia Savarino ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 764-764
Author(s):  
Abdoul Karim Dembele ◽  
Patricia Hermand-Tournamille ◽  
Florence Missud ◽  
Emmanuelle Lesprit ◽  
Malika Benkerrou ◽  
...  

Abstract Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a severe hemoglobinopathy due to abnormal hemoglobin S (HbS). Although red blood cell dysfunction is at the core of the SCD pathophysiology, several studies have highlighted the important role of inflammatory cells like neutrophils. One of the most serious complications of SCD is cerebral vasculopathy (CV), due to the occlusion of one or more intracranial or cervical arteries. In 1998, the STOP study demonstrated that monthly blood transfusions could reduce the risk of stroke by 90% in children with CV. However, there is large heterogeneity in the evolution of CV under chronic transfusion, sometimes requiring exchange transfusion (ET) program for years without succeeding in healing the CV. The aim of the study is to investigate the impact of long-term transfusion program on neutrophil dysfunction, in order to understand if persistent inflammation could contribute to the non-healing of CV despite HbS permanently below 40%. In SCD children undergoing ET program for at least 1 year, we analysed i)the phenotype of neutrophils with 8 markers of activation/adhesion/ageing, ii)the plasmatic levels of elastase, witnessing the NETose activity of neutrophils, and iii)the ex-vivo adhesion of neutrophils on activated endothelial cells. One hundred and two SCD children with an ET transfusion program for at least 6 months because of CV were included in the study. ET session, carried out every 5 weeks and most of the time by erythrapheresis, reached their biological objectives with a mean HbS rate after ET session of 14.1%, and 35.4% before the next ET session, which means that these patients globally live at an average HbS level of 24% for at least 1 year. We managed to limit iron overload with a mean ferritinemia of 207 µg/L in the whole cohort. Despite these satisfactory results in terms of HbS reduction, the efficiency in curing the CV was modest in accordance with the previously described efficiency of ET program in SCD children: after a mean ET program duration of 4.4 years only 22% of them had an improvement of their CV since the beginning of the ET program, while 60% of them had a stagnation of their CV, and 18% of them worsened their vascular lesions. Considering inflammatory parameters, the patients had persistence of high leukocytosis and high neutrophils count (respective mean of 9810 G/L and 5742 G/L), significantly not different of neutrophils count before inclusion in the ET program. In a random subgroup of 20 patients, we analysed neutrophils phenotype, NETose and endothelial adhesion and compared them to healthy controls and SCD children without ET, treated or not with Hydroxyurea (HU). Overall, we observed as expected an activated, aged and adherent profile of neutrophils from untreated SCD children compared to healthy controls, characterized by an overexpression of CD18/CD11b (p=0,03), CD18/CD11a (p=0,02), CD162 (p=0,01), CD66a (p=0,01) and the ageing markers CD184 high/CD62Llow (p=0,04) as well as a higher plasmatic level of elastase (p=0. 01) and higher adhesion of neutrophils to endothelial cells. All these parameters were alleviated in SCD patients treated with HU. In SCD patient undergoing ET program, we found a similar profile of activated neutrophils to that of untreated SCD patients with a similar expression of activation molecules, high level of elastase and the same increase of neutrophils adhesion to endothelial cells compared to controls, witnessing a persistence of chronic inflammation despites years of ET. Overall, our study highlights that the replacement of sickle red blood cells, even for years, is not sufficient to reverse the deleterious inflammatory phenotype of neutrophils. Given the major role of inflammation in endothelial dysfunction, these could contribute to the persistence of CV in a majority of patients despite efficient ET programs. This raises the question of systematically combining ET program with anti-inflammatory treatment such as HU or P-selectin inhibitors in children with CV. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 963-968 ◽  
Author(s):  
JP Piau ◽  
J Delaunay ◽  
S Fischer ◽  
M Tortolero ◽  
G Schapira

We have investigated adenylate cyclase in ghosts from normal and pathologic human red blood cells. Basic parameters such as specific activity, apparent Michaelis constant (KMapp), and response to effectors: sodium fluoride (NaF), 5′-guanylyl imidodiphosphate (Gpp (NH)p), isoproterenol, and PGE1 were investigated. Basal and NaF- stimulated activities were measured in ghosts from patients with hereditary spherocytosis, sickle cell disease, and various unidentified hemolytic anemias. Both activities were increased in any of these pathologic conditions as compared with those of normal red blood cells. Normal values were found in patients with hereditary spherocytosis after splenectomy and in patients with heterozygous sickle cell disease. There was a good correlation between the reticulocyte count and adenylate cyclase activity in hereditary spherocytosis and in sickle cell disease with reticulocyte count lower than 10%. The enzyme activity of the first group was about three times that of the second group. There was no correlation at all in sickle cell disease with higher reticulocytosis and in the group of unidentified hemolytic anemias. These results suggest that increased adenylate cyclase activities are not specific of any of these diseases. In the patients with hereditary spherocytosis, the adenylate cyclase activity seems to be essentially related to younger mean age of red blood cell population while in the patients with sickle cell disease and in others with unidentified hemolytic anemias some additional factors might interfere directly with the enzyme and alter its activity.


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