Damage to the internal viscosity of red cell is correlated with changes in the surface area to volume ratio and to prelytic phenomena. Considerable changes in shape were noticed in red cells from shocked dogs and some critically ill patients in blood smear or fresh preparation, or after in vitro treatment with colloidal plasma substitutes or glucose, and so erythrocyte filterability was investigated in critically ill patients, given or not given parenteral nutrition. The results revealed an increase of the erythrocyte filtration time (EFT 1/2) in more than 50% of the critically ill patients and less alteration in critically ill patients given total parenteral nutrition, the mortality being half as great.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty-one out of 32 apparently healthy blood donors aged 21 to 65 years yielded positive complement fixation tests with a cytomegalovirus antigen, at titres ranging from 1:8 to 1:64. Virus was present in leucocyte cultures of fresh peripheral blood of two seropositive subjects from a total of 35 donors examined. Plasma and 48-hour stored blood specimens failed to disclose virus in culture.
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