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Comparison of three commercially available ektacytometers with different shearing geometries.
- Source :
-
Biorheology [Biorheology] 2009; Vol. 46 (3), pp. 251-64. - Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- In December 2008, the International Society for Clinical Hemorheology organized a workshop to evaluate and compare three ektacytometer instruments for measuring deformability of red blood cells (RBC): LORCA (Laser-assisted Optical Rotational Cell Analyzer, RR Mechatronics, Hoorn, The Netherlands), Rheodyn SSD (Myrenne GmbH, Roetgen, Germany) and RheoScan-D (RheoMeditech, Seoul, Korea). Intra-assay reproducibility and biological variation were determined using normal RBC, and cells with reduced deformability (i.e., 0.001-0.02% glutaradehyde (GA), 48 degrees C heat treatment) were employed as either the only RBC present or as a sub-population. Standardized difference values were used as measure of the power to detect differences between normal and treated cells. Salient results include: (1) All instruments had intra-assay variations below 5% for shear stress (SS)>1 Pa but a sharp increase was found for Rheodyn SSD and RheoScan-D at lower SS; (2) Biological variation was similar and markedly increased for SS<3-5 Pa; (3) All instruments detected GA-treated RBC with maximal power at 1-3 Pa, the presence of 10% or 40% GA-modified cells, and the effects of heat treatment. It is concluded that the LORCA, Rheodyn SSD and RheoScan-D all have acceptable precision and power for detecting reduced RBC deformability due to GA treatment or heat treatment, and that the SS range selected for the measurement of deformability is an important determinant of an instrument's power.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Equipment Design
Erythrocyte Deformability drug effects
Erythrocytes drug effects
Glutaral pharmacology
Hemorheology
Hot Temperature
Humans
Lasers
Male
Middle Aged
Reproducibility of Results
Stress, Mechanical
Technology Assessment, Biomedical methods
Erythrocyte Deformability physiology
Rheology instrumentation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1878-5034
- Volume :
- 46
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Biorheology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 19581731
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3233/BIR-2009-0536