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Issue title: The Fifth European Conference on Clinical Hemorheology. Part I
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Stuart, J.; * | Keidan, A.J. | Stone, P.C.W. | Sowter, M.C.
Affiliations: Department of Haematology, Medical School, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TJ, UK
Correspondence: [*] Correspondence to Professor J. Stuart, Department of Haematology, Medical School, Birmingham B15 2TJ, UK.
Note: [] Accepted by: Guest Editor J.C. Healy
Abstract: Intracellular dehydration is a feature of older erythrocytes which thus have a higher mean cell haemoglobin concentration and can be separated by density-gradient fractionation. Studies of fractionated erythrocytes have demonstrated rheological and haematological heterogeneity with the denser cells showing multiple rheological abnormalities. Sickle cells are particularly heterogeneous with the denser sub-populations having a dominant rheological effect. Rheological methods should take this heterogeneity into account by analysis of erythrocyte sub-populations after density-gradient fractionation or by using instruments that measure the rheology of single cells. Such techniques are of particular importance in studies of the pathogenesis and treatment of sickle-cell disease.
Keywords: Rheology, Erythrocyte deformability, Erythrocyte sub-populations
DOI: 10.3233/CH-1988-83-426
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 8, no. 3-4, pp. 467-475, 1988
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