Haemoglobin and Red
نویسنده
چکیده
In 1866 Korber found chemical differences between haemoglobin obtained from human placental blood and that from normal adult blood. Since then it has been clearly demonstrated that there are many important differences between human and animal and between foetal and adult haemoglobins (Kroger, 1888; Bischoff and Schulte, 1926; Haurowitz, 1930, 1935; Trought, 1932; Brinkman, Wildschut and Wittermans, 1934; Hill, 1935; Brinkman and Jonxis, 1935; Jope and O'Brien, 1949). Haselhorst and Stromberger (1930, 1932) showed that the blood of the human foetus possessed a higher affinity for oxygen than that of its mother, but Hill (1935) found that human foetal haemoglobin had a lower affinity than human adult haemoglobin. This apparent anomaly was explained by the work of McCarthy (1943), who showed that the affinity of the haemoglobins for oxygen was greatly modified when they were within a corpuscle. Adult corpuscles caused a marked decrease in the oxygen affinity of their contained haemoglobin, while foetal corpuscles had little effect on the affinity of foetal haemoglobin for oxygen. Recently, Allen, Wyman and Smith (1953) have re-studied the oxygen affinity of human haemoglobins. Unlike Hill (1935) and Haurowitz (1935) they found no difference between the affinity for oxygen of the haemoglobin of the human foetus and that of its mother, provided that the haemoglobin solutions were so treated that the concentrations of dialysable substances were identical. They also found that the haemoglobin from one foetus at 31 weeks had the same affinity as the haemoglobins of term foetuses and of their mothers. Most investigators have been concerned with a study of the physical, chemical and other characteristics of human haemoglobins, and little information is available of the relative proportions ofeach type of haemoglobin in the blood of the human foetus at various stages of gestation, although such information is available for the sheep foetus. Karvonen (1949) found that adult haemoglobin first appeared in the sheep foetus at or about the 105th day and that at term 50% of the haemoglobin was adult in type. Beaven, Hoch and Holiday (1951), in one human foetus, at 20 weeks' gestation, found that 6% of the haemoglobin was of the adult type and Schulman (1953) that there was at least 10% adult haemoglobin in the blood of premature infants. Many investigators have, however, studied the proportion of adult haemoglobin in the cord blood of the foetus at birth, at or near full term, and their results are shown in Table 1, from which it can be seen that
منابع مشابه
Absorption Spectra of Normal Adults and Patients with Sickle Cell Anaemia Haemoglobins Treated with Hydrogen Peroxide at Two pH Values
Background: The aim of the present study was application of haemoglobin absorption spectroscopy as a distinguishing tool for identification of two haemoglobin types-HbA and HbS. Material and Methods: Millimolar absorptivities of normal adult haemoglobin (HbA) and sickle cell haemoglobin (HbS) were monitored at pH values of 7.2 and 5.0, within the ultra violet and visible spectral range (250-...
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In a previous paper (Walker and Turnbull, 1953) we have demonstrated the haemoglobm levels and red cell count in the cord blood of the human foetus throughout pregnancy. From the 10th week to the 24th week the red cell count doubles (from 1,500,000 to 3,000,000), but the haemoglobin rises only from 9 to 15 g. After the 24th week, the red cell count continues to rise till at 40 weeks, in the wel...
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The electrochemical behavior of iron ion in haemoglobin provides insight to the chemical activity in the red blood cell which is important in the field of hematology. Herein, the detection of haemoglobin in human red blood cells on glassy carbon electrode (GC) was demonstrated. Red blood cells or raw blood cells was immobilized on a glassy carbon electrode surface with Nafion films employed to ...
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متن کاملEvaluation of some haematological variables of Acipenser persicus and Acipenser stellatus at different water temperaures
Some haematological variables including Red Blood Cells (RBC), White Blood Cells (WBC) differential counts, Haemoglobin (Hb), Haematorite (HCT), Mean Corpuscular Volume (MCV), Mean Corpuscular Haemoglobin (MCH) and Mean Corpuscular Haemoglobin Concentration (MCHC) were measured in 90 stellate sturgeon juveniles Acipenser stellatus (1-2 years old) and 90 Persian sturgeons Acipenser persicus (1-2...
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