Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5591452 | Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases | 2017 | 32 Pages |
Abstract
Decreased erythrocyte deformability, as measured by ektacytometry, may be associated with disease severity in sickle cell anemia (SCA). Heterogeneous populations of rigid and deformable cells in SCA blood result in distortions of diffraction pattern measurements that correlate with the concentration of hemoglobin S (HbS) and the percentage of irreversibly sickled cells. We hypothesize that red cell heterogeneity, as well as deformability, will also be influenced by the concentration of alternative hemoglobins such as fetal hemoglobin (HbF) and the adult variant, HbA2. To test this hypothesis, we investigate the relationship between diffraction pattern distortion, osmotic gradient ektacytometry parameters, and the hemoglobin composition of SCA blood. We observe a correlation between the extent of diffraction pattern distortions and percentage of HbF and HbA2. Osmotic gradient ektacytometry data indicate that minimum elongation in the hypotonic region is positively correlated with HbF, as is the osmolality at which it occurs. The osmolality at both minimum and maximum elongation is inversely correlated with HbS and HbA2. These data suggest that HbF may effectively improve surface-to-volume ratio and osmotic fragility in SCA erythrocytes. HbA2 may be relatively ineffective in improving these characteristics or cellular hydration at the levels found in this patient cohort.
Keywords
RDWMCHCHBFMCVMCHHBSpro-BNPHBSCRBCHCTSCAHBAHbA2HPFHErythrocytesSickle cell diseasehereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobinMean corpuscular volumehealthy volunteerelongation indexRed cell distribution widthlactate dehydrogenaseLDHMean corpuscular hemoglobin concentrationhematocritHemoglobinFetal hemoglobinHgbPascalSickle cell anemiared blood cell
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Molecular Biology
Authors
Nermi L. Parrow, Hongbin Tu, James Nichols, Pierre-Christian Violet, Corinne A. Pittman, Courtney Fitzhugh, Robert E. Fleming, Narla Mohandas, John F. Tisdale, Mark Levine,