Recent studies have identified older, low-density sickle red blood cells (SSRBCs) that were resistant to dehydration by valinomycin, a K(+) ionophore. These cells, thought to derive from dense SSRBCs that have rehydrated, may represent a terminal cellular phase. To study rehydration, we subjected dense SSRBCs (rho > 1.107 g/cc) to either oxygenated incubation or rapid oxygenated/deoxygenated (oxy/deoxy) cycling (70 seconds per cycle). Light cells (rho < 1.087 g/cc) were generated during both oxy incubation (2.9% +/- 2.1%; n = 42) and oxy/deoxy cycling (5.3% +/- 2.4%; n = 42). The rehydrated cells were K(+)-depleted (K(+) = 20 +/- 14 mmol/kg hemoglobin [Hb]) and Na(+)-loaded (Na(+) = 394 +/- 106 mmol/kg Hb), and had high levels of external phosphatidylserine. In the presence of external calcium, the generation of rehydrated SSRBCs was inhibited during oxy/deoxy cycling, but the percentage with external phosphatidylserine increased. The calcium-mediated inhibition of rehydration was reversed by charybdotoxin, implying that rehydration was delayed in some cells by the Ca(++)-activated K(+) channel. Preincubation of dense SSRBCs with DIDS (4,4'-di-isothiocyanato-2,2'-disulfostilbene) inhibited the generation of light cells during fast oxy/deoxy cycling, but not during oxy incubation. These results suggest that the sickling-induced pathway, previously implicated in SSRBC dehydration, may be involved in the deoxy-dependent component of rehydration for dense, K(+)-depleted cells. Light-cell generation was inhibited by 1 mM bumetanide during both oxy incubation and oxy/deoxy cycling, providing evidence that a bumetanide-sensitive, deoxy-independent pathway, previously described in circulating light SSRBCs, also contributes to the rehydration of high-density SSRBCs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2002-02-0631 | DOI Listing |
Med Sci Sports Exerc
April 2021
Department of Sports Medicine for Health Promotion, Tokyo Medical University, Tokyo, JAPAN.
Purpose: Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), performed with a commonly available noninvasive tissue oxygenation monitoring device, is based on the modified Beer-Lambert law (MBLL). Although NIRS based on MBLL (NIRSMBLL) assumes that the optical path length (PL) is constant, the effects of changes in PL during exercise on muscle oxygenation calculated by MBLL are still incompletely understood. Thus, the purposes of this study were to examine the changes in optical properties during ramp incremental exercise and to compare muscle oxygen dynamics measured by time-resolved NIRS with those calculated based on MBLL.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSports (Basel)
January 2020
Health and Human Physiological Sciences Department, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs 12866 NY, USA.
Background: Load carriage (LC), which directly affects the chest wall and locomotor muscles, has been suggested to alter the ventilatory and circulatory responses to exercise, leading to increased respiratory muscle work and fatigue. However, studies exploring the impact of LC on locomotion increased internal work, complicating their interpretation. To overcome this issue, we sought to determine the effect of chest wall loading with restriction (CWL + R) on cycling performance, cardiopulmonary responses, microvascular responsiveness, and perceptions of fatigue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltraschall Med
December 2019
Department of Radiology, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Purpose: Optoacoustic imaging with ultrasound (OPUS) can assess in-vivo perfusion/oxygenation through surrogate measures of oxy, deoxy and total hemoglobin content in tissues. The primary aim of our study was to evaluate the ability of OPUS to detect physiological changes in the breast during the menstrual cycle and to determine qualitative/quantitative metrics of normal parenchymal tissue in pre-/post-menopausal women. The secondary aim was to assess the technique's repeatability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol Neurobiol
August 2018
Department of Respiratory Medicine & Exercise Therapy, Schoen Klinik Berchtesgadener Land, Schoenau am Koenigssee, Germany; Department of Pulmonary Rehabilitation, Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany; German Center of Lung Research (DZL), Giessen-Marburg, Germany. Electronic address:
Insufficient cerebral blood flow regulation to meet increasing metabolic demand during physical exertion could be associated with cognitive impairment. We compared cerebral oxygen availability during exercise in cognitively impaired (CI) to cognitively normal (CN) COPD patients. Fifty-two patients (FEV: 51 ± 16%) were classified as CN or CI according to the Montreal Cognitive Assessment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Sports Med
July 2016
Kinesiology, Indiana University, Bloomington, United States.
We investigated how inspiratory muscle training impacted respiratory and locomotor muscle deoxygenation during submaximal exercise with resistive inspiratory loading. 16 male cyclists completed 6 weeks of either true (n=8) or sham (n=8) inspiratory muscle training. Pre- and post-training, subjects completed 3, 6-min experimental trials performed at ~80% ˙VO2peak with interventions of either moderate inspiratory loading, heavy inspiratory loading, or maximal exercise imposed in the final 3 min.
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