Search results for "Red blood cell"

showing 10 items of 125 documents

Properties of erythrocyte light refraction in diabetic patients.

2001

Since hyperglycaemia changes the erythrocyte cell membrane fluidity and impairs cell deformity, our goal was to characterize hemoglobin and red blood cell (RBC) light refractive property changes in diabetic patients. Microscopic investigation was carried out on intact and fixed RBCs. To determine the refractive index (RI): smears of peripheral blood were air dried and fixed for 3 min in methanol. Mixtures of polyvinylpyrolidine and buffer of different pH (1:1) were used as embedding media. Intact RBCs were mixed with a buffered embedding medium, placed on a slide and overlaid with a coverslip. Interference microscopy was used for RI measurements at 18 different pH (pH=2-13). The results sho…

Blood GlucoseOptics and PhotonicsErythrocytesLightBiomedical EngineeringIn Vitro TechniquesBiomaterialsOpticsmedicineDiabetes MellitusHumansScattering RadiationMicroscopy InterferenceChromatographyChemistrybusiness.industryHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationRefractionAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsPeripheral bloodElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structureCase-Control StudiesHyperglycemiaHemoglobinMicroscopy PolarizationbusinessJournal of biomedical optics
researchProduct

Glucose and Erythrocyte ATP: Distinctive Effects of Dipyridamole and of Ticlopidine

1987

This experiment suggests the following points: 1. Erythrocytes in control patients and in atherosclerosis patients seem to have a variable grade of affinity for adenosine and for plasma glucose. This variable grade seems to fix the level of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP) reserves and induces the erythrocytes' deformability. 2. The drop in the level of ATP reserves that induces the poor deformability of the erythrocytes in atherosclerosis patients would appear to be caused by two consecutive shortages: first a shortage that seems to be related to a deficiency of erythrocyte adenosine as the ATP shortage disappears with dipyridamole treatment and then a shortage induced by the lack of eryt…

Blood Glucosemedicine.medical_specialtyAdenosineErythrocytesTiclopidineArteriosclerosismedicine.medical_treatmentEconomic shortage030204 cardiovascular system & hematology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundAdenosine Triphosphate0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineTiclopidineChemotherapyPlasma glucosebusiness.industryDipyridamoleAdenosineDipyridamoleRed blood cellEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryDrug Therapy CombinationCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessAdenosine triphosphatemedicine.drugAngiology
researchProduct

Spontaneous and Fas-induced apoptosis of low-grade MDS erythroid precursors involves the endoplasmic reticulum

2008

Spontaneous apoptosis of bone marrow erythroid precursors accounts for the anemia that characterizes most low-grade myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). We have shown that death of these precursors involved the Fas-dependent activation of caspase-8. To explore the pathway leading from caspase-8 activation to apoptosis, we transduced MDS bone marrow CD34(+) cells with a lentivirus encoding wild-type (WT) or endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-targeted Bcl-2 protein before inducing their erythroid differentiation. Both WT-Bcl-2 and ER-targeted Bcl-2 prevented spontaneous and Fas-dependent apoptosis in MDS erythroid precursors. ER-targeted Bcl-2 inhibited mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cytochrom…

Cancer ResearchProgrammed cell deathApoptosis[SDV.BC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cellular BiologyMitochondrionEndoplasmic Reticulum03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinehemic and lymphatic diseasesmedicineHumansfas ReceptorErythropoietinComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS030304 developmental biologyErythroid Precursor Cells0303 health sciencesbiologyCytochrome cEndoplasmic reticulumMembrane ProteinsAnemiaHematologyCaspase InhibitorsMitochondria3. Good healthCell biologyRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structureProto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2OncologyErythropoietinApoptosisMyelodysplastic Syndromes030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer researchbiology.protein[SDV.IMM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/ImmunologyCalciumBone marrowmedicine.drug
researchProduct

Red Blood Cell Eicosapentaenoic Acid Inversely Relates to MRI-Assessed Carotid Plaque Lipid Core Burden in Elders at High Cardiovascular Risk

2017

Supplemental marine omega-3 eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) has an anti-atherosclerotic effect. Clinical research on EPA supplied by the regular diet and atherosclerosis is scarce. In the framework of the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) trial, we conducted a cross-sectional study in 161 older individuals at high vascular risk grouped into different stages of carotid atherosclerosis severity, including those without ultrasound-detected atheroma plaque (n = 38), with plaques <2.0 mm thick (n = 65), and with plaques ≥2.0 mm (n = 79). The latter were asked to undergo contrast-enhanced 3T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and were subsequently grouped into absence (n = 31) or presence (n…

Carotid Artery DiseasesMalePathologyErythrocytes030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyCarotid Intima-Media Thicknessatherosclerosis; diet; fish; imaging; omega-3Body Mass Indexchemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineRisk Factors030212 general & internal medicinechemistry.chemical_classificationNutrition and Dieteticsmedicine.diagnostic_testimagingMiddle AgedMagnetic Resonance ImagingEicosapentaenoic acidPlaque AtheroscleroticCholesterolmedicine.anatomical_structureEicosapentaenoic AcidCardiovascular DiseasesCardiologyFemalelipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Internal carotid arteryomega-3lcsh:Nutrition. Foods and food supplymedicine.medical_specialtylcsh:TX341-641Article03 medical and health sciencesmedicine.arteryInternal medicinemedicineHumansTriglyceridesAgedfishCholesterolbusiness.industryFatty acidMagnetic resonance imagingmedicine.diseaseRed blood cellCross-Sectional StudiesNutrition AssessmentAtheromachemistryatherosclerosisbusinessdietBody mass indexBiomarkersFood ScienceNutrients
researchProduct

Reaction of melatonin with hemoglobin-derived oxoferryl radicals and inhibition of the hydroperoxide-induced hemoglobin denaturation in red blood cel…

2001

Melatonin has been shown to act as a radical scavenger in various chemical and biological model systems in vitro. Kinetic evidence is now provided showing that melatonin inhibits the irreversible degradation of hemoglobin (Hb), when incubated with red blood cells exposed to the oxidant activity of cumene hydroperoxide (cumOOH). A decrease of heme loss and accumulation of soluble methemoglobin (met-Hb) are explained in terms of the interaction of the indoleamine with perferryl Hb ( . Hb[Fe IV = O]), a highly reactive Hb-derived radical species responsible for the irreversible Hb degradation. A kinetic study, in pure chemical solution, showed that melatonin can effectively reduce the oxoferry…

ChemistryRadicalMethemoglobinMelatoninchemistry.chemical_compoundRed blood cellEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryCumene hydroperoxidemedicineTroloxHemoglobinHemehormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsmedicine.drugJournal of Pineal Research
researchProduct

Chemotherapy and Hepatic Steatosis: Impact on Postoperative Morbidity and Survival after Liver Resection for Colorectal Liver Metastases

2020

&lt;b&gt;&lt;i&gt;Background:&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/b&gt; Hepatic steatosis and chemotherapy in the treatment of colorectal liver metastases (CLM) are often linked to increased mortality and morbidity after liver resection. This study evaluates the influence of macrovesicular hepatic steatosis and chemotherapeutic regimes on graded morbidity and mortality after liver resection for CLM. &lt;b&gt;&lt;i&gt;Methods:&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/b&gt; A total of 323 cases of liver resection for CLM were retrospectively analysed using univariable and multivariable linear, ordinal and Cox regression analyses. The resected liver tissue was re-evaluated by a single observer to determine the grade and type of hepatic steat…

Chemotherapymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryProportional hazards modelColorectal cancermedicine.medical_treatmentGastroenterologymedicine.diseaseGastroenterologyOxaliplatinInternal medicineMedicineSurgerySteatosisRisk factorMacrovesicular hepatic steatosisbusinessPacked red blood cellsResearch Articlemedicine.drugVisceral Medicine
researchProduct

Effects of Red Cell Spacing and Red Cell Movement Upon Oxygen Release Under Conditions of Maximally Working Skeletal Muscle

1989

The impacts of the particulate nature of blood upon capillary O 2 release have been studied extensively by Federspiel and Sarelius [8] and by Federspiel and Popel [9]. The latter authors found that the O 2 flux out of a capillary decreases rapidly as intracapillary red blood cell spacing increases. The O 2 flux out of a single RBC, however, is enhanced as long as the inter-erythrocytic plasma gap does not exceed the “zone-of-influence” of a single RBC, which they determined to be about 1 capillary diameter. In their model, they considered spherical red cells contained in a cylindrical tube filled with plasma, on the lateral surface of which a boundary Po 2 was specified. Based on earlier st…

ConvectionRed CellLateral surfaceChemistryCapillary actionFluxchemistry.chemical_elementPlasmaAnatomyOxygenRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineBiophysics
researchProduct

A versatile model of steady state O2 supply to tissue. Application to skeletal muscle

1990

A model of combined convective and diffusive O2 transport to tissue is suggested which allows for the calculation of PO2 distributions in a cuboid tissue region with arbitrary microvascular geometries and blood flows. Carrier-facilitated O2 diffusion in the erythrocytes and in the tissue and red blood cell reaction kinetics are considered. The model is based on analytical descriptions of the PO2 fields of single erythrocytes surrounded by carrier-free layers in an infinite three-dimensional space containing an O2 carrier such as myoglobin. These PO2 fields are overlaid to obtain a solution of the differential equation of diffusion in respiring tissue. The model has been applied to a situati…

Convectioninorganic chemicalsErythrocytesDifferential equationPartial PressureBiophysicsHomogenization (chemistry)Models Biologicalchemistry.chemical_compoundOxygen ConsumptionmedicineAnimalsCuboidMusclesConductanceSkeletal muscleAnatomyOxygenRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structureMyoglobinchemistryRegional Blood FlowBiophysicsMathematicsResearch ArticleBiophysical Journal
researchProduct

Blood Donations and Transfusions during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Spain: Impact According to Autonomous Communities and Hospitals

2021

Worldwide, the COVID-19 pandemic has caused a decline in blood donations, between 30% and 70% in some of the most affected countries. In Spain, during the initial eight weeks after the State of Emergency was decreed on 14 March 2020, in the weekly reports of the Health Ministry, an average decrease of 20% was observed between 11 and week 25 compared with the 2018 donation. We aimed to investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on blood donations and blood distribution in four autonomous communities, and to explore the evolution of the consumption of blood components (BCs) in ten hospitals of six autonomous communities. We performed a prospective study of grouped cohorts on the donation…

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)MedicinaHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesislcsh:MedicineBlood Donors030230 surgeryArticle03 medical and health sciencesBlood donations0302 clinical medicinePandemicHumansMedicineProspective Studies030212 general & internal medicineProspective cohort studyPandemicsRetrospective StudiestransfusionConsumption (economics)SARS-CoV-2business.industrypandemiclcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCOVID-19Retrospective cohort studyHospitalsSpainDonationPacked red blood cellsbusinessDemographyInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
researchProduct

Cytotoxic activity of Ciona intestinalis (Tunicata) hemocytes: Properties of the in vitro reaction against erythrocyte targets

1993

Hemocytes (effectors) of Ciona intestinalis showed a natural cytotoxic capacity (HCA) when assayed in vitro against erythrocytes (targets). Cytotoxic cells lysed, to a variable extent, rabbit (RE), human (A, B, O), guinea pig, and sheep (SE) erythrocytes. Hemocyte cytotoxic activity (HCA) assayed against SE is a calcium-dependent reaction, occurs rapidly (15-30 min), at 25-37 degrees C over a wide range of pH (5.4-8.0). Assays were carried out using: 1) the medium in which hemocytes were maintained, 2) the soluble portion of hemocyte lysates, and 3) debris prepared from hemocyte lysates. Results suggest that HCA is a cell-mediated process that requires effector-target cell contacts. Anti-SE…

Cytotoxicity ImmunologicErythrocytesHemocytesLysisCiona intestinaliCytotoxicityHemolysinImmunologyCellHemocyteTunicateHemolymphmedicineAnimalsCytotoxic T cellCiona intestinalisInvertebrateCytotoxicitySheepbiologyHemolysinHemagglutination Testsbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyIn vitroCiona intestinalisRed blood cellmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologySheep erythrocyteDevelopmental BiologyDevelopmental &amp; Comparative Immunology
researchProduct