Biological and environmental factors affecting ultrasound-induced hemolysis in vitro : 5. Temperature

This research project tested the hypothesis that cold-equilibrated (∼0°C) human erythrocytes in vitro in the presence of an ultrasound contrast agent (Albunex ®) will undergo greater ultrasound-induced hemolysis than physiologically equilibrated (37°C) human erythrocytes in vitro because of a temper...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ultrasound in medicine & biology 2006-06, Vol.32 (6), p.893-904
Hauptverfasser: Miller, Morton W., Church, Charles C., Labuda, Cecille, Mazza, Salvatore, Raymond, Jason
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This research project tested the hypothesis that cold-equilibrated (∼0°C) human erythrocytes in vitro in the presence of an ultrasound contrast agent (Albunex ®) will undergo greater ultrasound-induced hemolysis than physiologically equilibrated (37°C) human erythrocytes in vitro because of a temperature-related transition in membrane fluidity leading to increased fragility. First, it was shown that cold-equilibrated erythrocytes are more susceptible to mechanically induced hemolysis than physiologically equilibrated erythrocytes. Second, when adjustments were made for (1) temperature-dependent efficiencies of a 1-MHz transducer (200 μs pulse length, 20 ms interpulse interval, 30 s exposure duration) such that when cold or physiological temperatures were employed, there were equivalent acoustic outputs in terms of peak negative pressure (MPa P −) and (2) comparable viscosities of the 0 and 37°C blood plasmas, the cold (∼0°C) erythrocytes displayed substantially greater amounts of ultrasound-induced hemolysis than the physiological (37°C) erythrocytes. The data supported the hypothesis. (E-mail: Morton_Miller@urmc.rochester.edu)
ISSN:0301-5629
1879-291X
DOI:10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2006.02.1423