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Journal ArticleDOI

New transfusion strategies: red cell substitutes.

Robert M. Winslow
- 01 Jan 1999 - 
- Vol. 50, Iss: 1, pp 337-353
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TLDR
The development of red cell substitutes affords a deeper insight into how oxygen is delivered to tissues in the microcirculation and how blood-flow distribution is regulated within and between organs.
Abstract
Red cell substitutes are solutions that can potentially be used in emergencies or during surgery when rapid expansion of the blood volume with an oxygen carrier is needed. The three main types of products in development are based on cell-free hemoglobin, perfluorocarbon emulsions, or liposome-encapsulated hemoglobin. None is currently approved for clinical use, but several are in advanced clinical trials. Outside the red blood cell, hemoglobin is subject to degradation and heme loss. It readily diffuses in the plasma space and effectively scavenges nitric oxide. These properties must be understood and controlled if hemoglobin-based products are to fulfill their promise. The development of red cell substitutes affords us a deeper insight into how oxygen is delivered to tissues in the microcirculation and how blood-flow distribution is regulated within and between organs. As red cell substitutes become available to clinicians and scientists, clinical applications are expected to expand.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

No scavenging and the hypertensive effect of hemoglobin-based blood substitutes.

TL;DR: This interpretation is supported by a strong linear correlation between the magnitude of the blood pressure effect caused by infusion of cross-linked recombinant hemoglobin tetramers in vivo and the rate of NO dioxygenation by these proteins measured in vitro.
Journal ArticleDOI

MP4, a new nonvasoactive PEG-Hb conjugate.

TL;DR: Vasoconstriction has been an obstacle to clinical development of Hb‐based O2 carriers and it is proposed that this limitation can be overcome by increasing molecular size and oxygen affinity.
Journal ArticleDOI

The clinical consequences of the red cell storage lesion.

TL;DR: Examination of storage-related changes in RBC shape in relation to posttransfusion survival and RBC function is reexamine, speculating on a possible association between storage- related changes and adverse clinical consequences of transfusing blood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular dimensions of Hb-based O2 carriers determine constriction of resistance arteries and hypertension

TL;DR: Constriction of resistance arteries was found to be correlated with the level of hypertension, and the responses were proportional to the molecular dimensions of the O(2) carriers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polymersome Encapsulated Hemoglobin: A Novel Type of Oxygen Carrier

TL;DR: In this paper, Bovine hemoglobin (Hb) was encapsulated inside polymer vesicles (polymersomes) to form polymersome encapsulated Hb (PEH) dispersions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

S-nitrosohaemoglobin: a dynamic activity of blood involved in vascular control

TL;DR: In this article, the role of S-nitrosohaemoglobin in the transduction of NO-related activities may have therapeutic applications, highlighting newly discovered allosteric and electronic properties of haemoglobin that appear to be involved in the control of blood pressure.
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A human recombinant haemoglobin designed for use as a blood substitute

TL;DR: Fusion of the two α-globin subunits increases the half-life of this haemoglobin molecule in vivo by preventing its dissociation into αβ dimers and therefore also eliminates renal toxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systemic and pulmonary hypertension after resuscitation with cell-free hemoglobin

TL;DR: Human hemoglobin (Hb) and Hb cross-linked between the alpha subunits with bis(3,5-dibromosalicyl)fumarate (alpha alpha Hb) were used to treat hemorrhagic shock in water-deprived swine and showed marked elevations of mean blood pressure in the systemic and pulmonary circulations.
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Arterial Blood Pressure Responses to Cell-free Hemoglobin Solutions and the Reaction with Nitric Oxide

TL;DR: The results suggest that blood pressure increases observed upon exchange transfusion with cell-free hemoglobin solutions can not be the result of ⋅NO scavenging reactions at the heme, but rather must be due to alternative physiologic mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microvascular and tissue oxygen distribution

TL;DR: This study investigates how tissue is oxygenated directly from the arteriolar supply on the basis of current results with newly developed optical techniques for the measurement of local intra- and extravascular pO2 by phosphorescence decay and develops a model that links convective and diffusive processes.
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