Mechanism of hemolysis after intravenous glycerol administration

1960 ◽  
Vol 198 (4) ◽  
pp. 895-898 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel G. Pinter ◽  
D. B. Zilversmit

Concentrated glycerol solutions in 0.9% saline, when administered intravenously to rabbits and rats, caused considerable intravascular hemolysis, but similar solutions given to dogs had no hemolytic effect. Perfusion of the partially isolated hind leg of the rabbit with Cr51-tagged and glycerol-containing red cell suspensions showed hemolysis of only those cells containing glycerol. This observation eliminates a hemolysin as the cause for the hemolysis. In vitro experiments showed that glycerol penetrates the erythrocytes of rats, rabbits and man quite rapidly, whereas the cells of dogs were penetrated at a much slower rate. It is suggested that the intravascular hemolysis caused by intravenous glycerol is produced by the rapid uptake of glycerol by the erythrocytes and a subsequent osmotic imbalance caused by the rapid decrease of glycerol concentration in the circulating plasma. It is proposed that this mechanism is a general one and explains, for example, the intravascular hemolysis caused by the intravenous injection of hyperosmotic urea dissolved in 0.9% saline.

1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (2) ◽  
pp. 152-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. T. Carr ◽  
N. R. Tiruvaloor

New data on laminar heat convection with red cell suspensions have been gathered for both heating and cooling. When compared to data for the suspending medium alone, it is apparent that the red cells enhance laminar heat transfer when Pe > 4. This is probably due to particle movements. These new data disagree with earlier studies which indicated no enhancement of heat transfer for blood cell suspensions. The data do agree with previous correlations for enhanced thermal transport in sheared suspensions.


Blood ◽  
1971 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 739-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. K. CHAN ◽  
L. W. MAK ◽  
RONALD P. NG

Abstract Two patients with poisoning by concentrated lysol are reported. One developed methemoglobinemia, a marked decrease in red cell glutathione level, and large solitary Heinz bodies associated with massive intravascular hemolysis 3 days later. The other patient, who had absorbed less lysol, developed methemoglobinemia and multiple small Heinz bodies that subsequently disappeared without frank hemolysis. No preexisting red cell defect was demonstrated in either patient, and in vitro experiments showed that these effects were due to a direct oxidant action of lysol and hydroquinone, a metabolite of phenol on the red cell.


1990 ◽  
Vol 152 (1) ◽  
pp. 149-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANK B. JENSEN

Red cell function was studied in carp by a combination of in vivo and in vitro experiments with nitrite as the perturbing agent. In vivo accumulation of nitrite caused a marked increase in the red cell methaemoglobin content, and reduced the mean cellular volume. The oxygen affinity of unoxidized haemoglobin was strongly decreased, partly as result of the elevated concentration of cellular nucleoside triphosphates and haemoglobin associated with red cell shrinkage. Red cell pH was unchanged compared to controls, but reduced when referred to constant extracellular pH and O2 saturation. The mean cellular K+ content decreased, reflecting a K+ loss from the red cells during their shrinkage. This K+ loss contributed significantly to the large plasma hyperkalaemia during nitrite exposure. In vitro experiments revealed that nitrite influx into deoxygenated red cells was much larger than into oxygenated red cells. Nitrite permeation of the red cell membrane was not inhibited by DIDS and did not change extracellular pH. Methaemoglobin (MetHb) formation was more pronounced in deoxygenated blood than in oxygenated blood, but quasi-steady states were reached, reflecting a balance between nitrite-induced MetHb formation and the action of MetHb reductase. Red cells incubated in the oxygenated state released K+, whereas a net K+ uptake occurred in deoxygenated cells. Nitrite did not change the K+ loss from oxygenated cells, but shifted the K+ uptake in deoxygenated cells to a pronounced K+ release by the time high MetHb levels were reached. Both types of red cell K+ release were inhibited by DIDS and appeared to occur via a route involving Band 3. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that a significant DIDS-sensitive K+ efflux from the red cells occurs whenever a large fraction of the haemoglobin molecules assumes an R-like quaternary structure.


Blood ◽  
1959 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
ERNEST BEUTLER

Abstract It has been recognized for a long time that 8-aminoquinoline compounds may cause hemolytic anemia in certain individuals, but until recently the mechanism of such sensitivity has remained obscure. The use of modern hematologic technics for the study of primaquine sensitivity has resulted in the discovery of a new intrinsic red cell defect. Cells with this defect are sensitive to hemolysis by a large number of aromatic amino compounds, including primaquine and other 8-aminoquinoline derivatives. Administration of primaquine to sensitive subjects results in destruction of the older members of the red cell population. Available evidence suggests that the administration of a hemolytic drug causes oxidative damage to either the hemoglobin and/or the stroma of the sensitive cell. Heinz bodies are visible manifestation of such damage. The damaged red cells are removed from the circulation by in vivo mechanisms, presumably by the reticulo-endothelial system. Red cell glutathione has been found to be related in some way to sensitivity to these compounds: (1) the glutathione level of sensitive cells is consistently lower than that of nonsensitive cells; (2) poisoning of the sulfhydryl groups of red cells causes nonsensitive cells to react like sensitive cells in vitro with respect to Heinz body formation; (3) a rapid fall in the red cell glutathione level occurs in vivo when primaquine is administered to sensitive individuals but not to nonsensitive ones; and (4) a rapid fall in GSH level occurs in sensitive but not in nonsensitive cells when they are incubated with acetyl phenylhydrazine and many other compounds. These observations indicate that there is a mechanism that protects GSH in the nonsensitive but not in sensitive cells. This mechanism was found to require presence of glucose or inosine. In sensitive cells, this mechanism is defective and the GSH of the older cells is destroyed. The GSH destructive effect appears in vitro, at least, to be exerted through the oxyhemoglobin. Primaquine-sensitive red cells have been found to be deficient in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase is involved in TPN reduction.45 TPN is a coenzyme for GSH reduction.103 Thus, a deficiency in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase could result in defective GSH reduction and may therefore serve as an explanation of the GSH instability of drug-sensitive red cells. It is not clear whether GSH serves merely as a convenient indicator of important changes within the cell that actually lead to cell death or whether GSH depletion plays a primary role in cell death and hemolysis. The role of GSH in the red cell is unknown, and evidence that GSH depletion leads to hemolysis has been obtained only by means which may be grossly injurious to the red cell in many other ways.51,75,116 It is entirely possible that another effect of G-6-P.D., such as TPNH deprivation, leads to cell damage in some entirely different way. Inability to reduce TPN might, for example, interfere with lipid synthesis in the red cell.77 It cannot even be considered clearly established that either the GSH instability or G-6-P.D. deficiency of these red cells is the primary defect leading to susceptability to hemolysis. If the level of G-6-P.D. alone governs the red cell’s resistance to hemolysis, one might expect mild enzyme deficiency to result in mild susceptibility to hemolysis. According to preliminary data reported by Alving et al.,2 this is not the case. The possibility must be considered, therefore, that not only GSH changes but even the G-6-P.D. changes in sensitive cells may be associated defects rather than of primary etiologic significance. Primaquine-sensitive red cells are also uniquely sensitive to the hemolytic effect of many other compounds, including acetanilid, Furadantin and other drugs commonly used in medicine. Yet, it would appear that many of these drugs can also on occasion cause hemolysis of normal red cells. Subjects who are sensitive to the fava bean have also been shown to have the same defect in GSH stability and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase as primaquine-sensitive individuals display, but here other, as yet unknown, predisposing factors would seem to be involved. The red cell defect of primaquine-sensitivity is genetically transmitted, probably as a sex-linked gene with intermediate penetrance. It has thus been shown that a drug-sensitivity reaction is intimately related to a genetically transmitted enzyme deficiency. It is entirely possible, as has been pointed out so effectively by Motulsky,95 that other drug sensitivities may have a similar basis.


1955 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-404 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Lennard Gold ◽  
A. K. Solomon

The relative Na24 specific activity of red cells and plasma was measured at periods up to 30 hours following a single intravenous injection of Na24 in normal healthy young adults. The average specific activity of the red cells relative to that of the plasma at 24 hours and beyond was found to average 0.83 ± 0.05 in a series of five normal individuals, significantly different from 1.0. This indicates that all the intracellular Na is not exchangeable in 24 hours, and confirms earlier in vitro results. The red cell Na concentration in man was shown to be 12.1 ± 1.1 m.eq. Na/liter red cell, as measured in a series of nineteen normal healthy young adults. A theoretical analysis of the data on exchangeable cell Na suggests that the red cell Na (5.3 m.eq. Na/liter blood) is divided into a fast compartment comprising 4.25 m.eq. Na/liter blood, and a slow compartment comprising 1.07 m.eq. Na/liter blood. If these compartments are arranged in parallel, the flux between plasma and fast compartment is 1.32 m.eq. Na/liter blood hour, and that between plasma and slow compartment is 0.016 m.eq. Na/liter blood hour. Results of experiments on two patients with congenital hemolytic jaundice suggest that the fraction of slowly exchanging Na may increase with the age of the red cell.


Blood ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 653-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
NANNIE K. M. DE LEEUW ◽  
A. BLAUSTEIN

Abstract 1. In vitro blood studies using the artificial kidney are discussed in detail. 2. In vitro experiments in which samples of blood in cellophane tubing are rotated on the drum showed a diminution in the red cell volume, leukocyte and platelet counts. Dilution, caused by the passage of the dialyzing fluid through the cellophane membrane and by the presence of some of the rinsing fluid, and rotation of the drum are factors of importance in this regard. 3. The influence of heparin and the chemotactic role of cellophane on the leukocytes are discussed. Heparin in concentration of 1 mg./10 cc. of blood causes in vitro agglutination and disintegration of leukocytes after approximately one hour. Photographs are shown that demonstrate coating of the cellophane by granulocytes. This is in keeping with the findings of Chambers and Grand that cellophane exerts a positive chemotactic influence on the granulocytes. 4. Hypersegmentation of the leukocytes was noted in samples of blood rotated on the drum for fifteen minutes. Exteriorization and slow speed centrifugation probably account for this phenomenon.


Blood ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
TAKEO KUROYANAGI ◽  
MASANOBU SAITO ◽  
AKIRA KURISU

Abstract The in vivo localization of heterologous anti-erythrocyte antibodies in the rat bone marrow was determined by the I131-labeled antibody technic. I131-labeled anti-erythrocyte antibodies localized specifically in the bone marrow indicating the presence of localizing antibody. Both the localizing antibody and the incomplete antibody were thermostable, whereas hemolysins and hemagglutinins were thermolabile. Following an intravenous injection of antierythrocyte antibodies in rats, hemolysins and hemagglutinins were cleared rapidly from the plasma. The incomplete antibodies became attached to circulating red cells within 6 hours and red cell sensitization persisted for 1 week. The localizing antibody localized in the bone marrow within 30 minutes, leaving no activity in plasma. The anti-erythrocyte antibodies markedly reduced the uptake of tritiated thymidine by erythroblasts in vitro, demonstrating their inhibitory effect on the proliferative capacity of erythroblasts.


Author(s):  
J. Metuzals

It has been demonstrated that the neurofibrillary tangles in biopsies of Alzheimer patients, composed of typical paired helical filaments (PHF), consist also of typical neurofilaments (NF) and 15nm wide filaments. Close structural relationships, and even continuity between NF and PHF, have been observed. In this paper, such relationships are investigated from the standpoint that the PHF are formed through posttranslational modifications of NF. To investigate the validity of the posttranslational modification hypothesis of PHF formation, we have identified in thin sections from frontal lobe biopsies of Alzheimer patients all existing conformations of NF and PHF and ordered these conformations in a hypothetical sequence. However, only experiments with animal model preparations will prove or disprove the validity of the interpretations of static structural observations made on patients. For this purpose, the results of in vitro experiments with the squid giant axon preparations are compared with those obtained from human patients. This approach is essential in discovering etiological factors of Alzheimer's disease and its early diagnosis.


1964 ◽  
Vol 47 (3_Suppl) ◽  
pp. S28-S36
Author(s):  
Kailash N. Agarwal
Keyword(s):  

ABSTRACT Red cells were incubated in vitro with sulfhydryl inhibitors and Rhantibody with and without prior incubation with prednisolone-hemisuccinate. These erythrocytes were labelled with Cr51 and P32 and their disappearance in vivo after autotransfusion was measured. Prior incubation with prednisolone-hemisuccinate had no effect on the rate of red cell disappearance. The disappearance of the cells was shown to take place without appreciable intravascular destruction.


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