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Hypertension and the Red Cell

New England Journal of Medicine, 1980
Because of their availability and ease of manipulation, red cells have long been a favorite subject for students of membrane structure and function and many transport pathways have been identified ...
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Red blood cell storage lesion: causes and potential clinical consequences.

Blood transfusion = Trasfusione del sangue, 2019
Red blood cells (RBCs) are a specialised organ that enabled the evolution of multicellular organisms by supplying a sufficient quantity of oxygen to cells that cannot obtain oxygen directly from ambient air via diffusion, thereby fueling oxidative ...
T. Yoshida   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Red Cell Polyagglutination

Transfusion Medicine Reviews, 1988
OLYAGGLUTINATION has been recognized since the beginning of the century. In this condition, altered human RBCs are agglutinated by a large percentage of compatible sera from healthy human adults, but not usually by their own serum or those from cord blood.
Naomi A. Levene   +3 more
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Red Cell Deformability

European Neurology, 1983
Deformation of red cells is an essential quality necessary for normal circulation. It can best be assessed by filtration techniques and these have revealed marked abnormalities in patients with cerebral ischemia. Whatever the exact pathological process involved, therapy aimed at normalizing red cell deformability may well be a successful approach to ...
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Red Cell Substitutes

Seminars in Hematology, 2007
Oxygen-carrying plasma expanders (blood substitutes) have been sought for over a century. Development of current products is a result of evolution in the understanding of proteins in general, of hemoglobin in particular, and of how cell-free hemoglobin interacts with the control of local blood flow to ensure adequate tissue oxygenation.
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Angiotensinase in red cells

Clinica Chimica Acta, 1966
Abstract Comparison of angiotensinase activity in red cells and plasma from rabbits and the fractionation of the enzyme were studied. 1. (1) Angiotensinase activity in red cells from humans and rabbits was much higher than that in plasma. Angiotensinase activity in red cells and plasma, when horizontal starch block electrophoresis was employed ...
H. Sanga   +5 more
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Red blood cells

The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 2002
Red blood cells are derived from haemopoietic stem cells in bone marrow. Following a series of maturation steps, directed largely by the hormone erythropoietin (Epo), red cells enucleate and enter the circulatory system. In circulation these small, flexible biconcave cells containing haemoglobin transport O(2) from the lungs to the periphery, and CO(2)
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Red Cell Enzymes

CRC Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences, 1975
As compared to other cells of the body, the mammalian red cell has one of the simplest structural organizations. As a result, this cell has been extensively used in studies involving the structure, function, and integrity of cell membranes as well as cytoplasmic events.
N. Vasudeva Paniker, Paul Hochstein
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Red Cells for Transfusion

New England Journal of Medicine, 1978
The current innovation in the preservation of red cells for transfusion is adenine. Adenine in the storage medium increases ATP content and enhances red-cell viability. A formula called citrate phosphate dextrose adenine (CPDA-1) has a bright new FDA license permitting its use for the storage of whole blood or red cells for as long as 35 days.1 During ...
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The Red Cell Membrane

Annual Review of Biochemistry, 1976
PERSPECTIVES AND SUMMARy 667 INTRODUCTION 668 POLYPEPTIDES OF THE HUMAN RED CELL MEMBRANE 669 A Provisional Model for the Arrangement of the Major Proteins . . 671 Location 0/ extrinsic membrane proteins 672 The integral membrane proteins 676 The sialoglycopeptides (PAS-I, PAS-2, glycophorin A) 677 PAS-3 and the minor glycopeptides
Heinz Furthmayr   +2 more
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