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Issue title: Alfred L. Copley Memorial Issue
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Stuart, John
Affiliations: Department of Haematology, The Medical School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK
Abstract: Copley (1) reminds us that the science of haemorheology includes study of the vessel wall as well as the components of the blood. This concept is particularly relevant to rheological studies in patients with sickle cell anaemia who exhibit a complex prothrombotic abnormality affecting vasomotor tone and vascular endothelium as well as the plasma and red cells. Such rheological complexity is further compounded by acute-phase changes secondary to cytokine release from ischaemic tissue. Serial longitudinal study of homozygous patients in the asymptomatic steady state has now suggested a fluctuating balance between accumulation and removal of poorly deformable and dense sickle cells which is associated with sub-clinical episodes of tissue ischaemia. In the prodromal phase of the painful sickle-cell crisis, there is also an accumulation of rheologically compromised dense cells which may be of aetiological significance in relation to the vaso-occlusion that results in established crisis.
Keywords: Sickle cell anaemia, rheology, acute-phase response
DOI: 10.3233/CH-1992-12603
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 12, no. 6, pp. 797-804, 1992
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