Dynamic response of red blood cells in health and disease.

Soft Matter

Department of Applied Mechanics, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai 600036, India.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The viscoelastic properties of red blood cells (RBCs) are significantly altered in hematological disorders, leading to decreased deformability and changes in cell shape, which impact overall blood flow dynamics.
  • The paper uses mesoscopic numerical simulations to study the behavior of healthy and diseased RBCs (from malaria and diabetes) under different external forces, focusing on how these forces affect cell deformation.
  • Results show unique shape changes in RBCs under varying stress conditions, highlighting a threshold where deformations become nearly reversible, suggesting that the response of these cells to external forces could serve as a potential biomarker for health status.

Article Abstract

The viscoelastic response of the red blood cells (RBCs) affected by hematological disorders become severely impaired by the altered biophysical and morphological properties. These include traits like reduced deformability, increased membrane viscosity, and change in cell shape, causing substantial changes in the overall hemodynamics. RBCs, by virtue of their highly elastic membrane and low bending rigidity, exhibit complex dynamics when exposed to cyclic, transient forces in the microcirculation. Here, we employ mesoscopic numerical simulations based on the dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) framework to explore the dynamics of healthy, schizont stage malaria-infected and type 2 diabetes mellitus affected RBCs subjected to external time-dependent loads. The paper focuses on the imposition and cessation of external forcing on the cells of two different typologies, saw-tooth cyclic wave loading and sudden loads in the form of creep and relaxation phenomena. The effects of varying the rate of stress and the applied stress magnitude were investigated. Our simulations disclosed unique shape transitions of the hysteresis curves at varied loading rates. A careful analysis reveals a critical threshold of half cycle time of the from wherein the deformation of all cells observed, healthy or otherwise, falls under the nearly reversible deformation regime displaying minimal energy dissipation. Finally, we also examined the individual effects of the different constitutive and geometric characteristics attributed to the pathological cells and observed interesting recovery dynamics of spherocytes and cells having high shear moduli. The distinguished deformation behaviour of healthy and diseased cells could establish external force as a valuable initial biomarker.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sm01090aDOI Listing

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