نتایج جستجو برای: rbcs

تعداد نتایج: 3599  

Journal: :Compendium of continuing education in dentistry 2010
Neeraj Malhotra Kundabala Mala

There has been a continual advent of improved technologies in dentistry. Among these are the material sciences of resin-based composites (RBCs). Since the introduction of light-cured RBCs, the problem of polymerization shrinkage and the methods used to overcome this have concerned clinicians and researchers. Types of curing light and modes of curing have been shown to affect the degree of polym...

Journal: :The Biochemical journal 2007
Katherine E Jackson Tobias Spielmann Eric Hanssen Akinola Adisa Frances Separovic Matthew W A Dixon Katharine R Trenholme Paula L Hawthorne Don L Gardiner Tim Gilberger Leann Tilley

Plasmodium falciparum develops within the mature RBCs (red blood cells) of its human host in a PV (parasitophorous vacuole) that separates the host cell cytoplasm from the parasite surface. The pore-forming toxin, SLO (streptolysin O), binds to cholesterol-containing membranes and can be used to selectively permeabilize the host cell membrane while leaving the PV membrane intact. We found that ...

Journal: :Blood 1992
C R Zerez N A Lachant K M Lent K R Tanaka

We have previously shown that physiologic concentrations of hemin cause marked inhibition of several red blood cell (RBC) enzymes. Because endogenous heme content is elevated in sickle RBCs, we have examined the activity of hemin-sensitive enzymes in these RBCs. One of the hemin-sensitive enzymes, pyrimidine nucleoside monophosphate kinase (PNMK), was shown to have decreased activity in sickle ...

Journal: :Blood 1994
D W Allen N Manning

Spur cell anemia is a hemolytic anemia seen in severe alcoholic cirrhosis that is characterized by unusual morphology and a decreased ratio of phospholipids to cholesterol in the erythrocyte membrane. We hypothesized that defective phospholipid repair may contribute to the red blood cell (RBC) phospholipid abnormalities of spur cell anemia. Therefore, we compared RBCs from normal control subjec...

2013
Jue Wang Lisa Wagner-Britz Anna Bogdanova Sandra Ruppenthal Kathrina Wiesen Elisabeth Kaiser Qinghai Tian Elmar Krause Ingolf Bernhardt Peter Lipp Stephan E. Philipp Lars Kaestner

Red blood cells (RBCs) are among the most intensively studied cells in natural history, elucidating numerous principles and ground-breaking knowledge in cell biology. Morphologically, RBCs are largely homogeneous, and most of the functional studies have been performed on large populations of cells, masking putative cellular variations. We studied human and mouse RBCs by live-cell video imaging,...

Journal: :Stroke 2001
G Xi Y Hua R R Bhasin S R Ennis R F Keep J T Hoff

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Red blood cell (RBC) lysis contributes to brain edema formation after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), and RBC hemolysate (oxyhemoglobin) has been implicated to be a spasminogen in subarachnoid hemorrhage. Whether cerebral ischemia contributes to brain edema formation after ICH remains unclear, however. The aims of this study were to test whether extravasation of RBCs indu...

2012
Youngchan Kim Kyoohyun Kim YongKeun Park

Human red blood cells (RBCs) or erythrocytes have remarkable deformability. Upon external forces, RBCs undergo large mechanical deformation without rupture, and they restore to original shapes when released. The deformability of RBCs plays crucially important roles in the main function of RBCs oxygen transport through blood circulation. RBCs must withstand large deformations during repeated pas...

Journal: :Medical engineering & physics 2016
Rosa D'Apolito Francesca Taraballi Silvia Minardi Xuewu Liu Sergio Caserta Armando Cevenini Ennio Tasciotti Giovanna Tomaiuolo Stefano Guido

Blood is a complex biological fluid composed of deformable cells and platelets suspended in plasma, a protein-rich liquid. The peculiar nature of blood needs to be considered when designing a drug delivery strategy based on systemically administered carriers. Here, we report on an in vitro fluid dynamic investigation of the influence of the microcapillary flow of red blood cells (RBCs) on micro...

2014
S. C. Saha A. Oloyede

The microcirculation of blood plays an important role in human body by providing oxygen and nutrients to the cells and removing carbon dioxide and wastes from the cells. This process is greatly affected by the rheological properties of the Red Blood Cells (RBCs). Changes in the rheological properties of the RBCs are caused by certain human diseases such as malaria and sickle cell diseases. Ther...

Journal: :Biophysical journal 2011
Dmitry A Fedosov Bruce Caswell George Em Karniadakis

Red blood cells (RBCs) infected by the Plasmodium falciparum (Pf-RBCs) parasite lose their membrane deformability and they also exhibit enhanced cytoadherence to vascular endothelium and other healthy and infected RBCs. The combined effect may lead to severe disruptions of normal blood circulation due to capillary occlusions. Here we extend the adhesion model to investigate the adhesive dynamic...

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