Altered RBC deformability in diabetes: clinical characteristics and RBC pathophysiology.

IF 8.5 1区 医学 Q1 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS Cardiovascular Diabetology Pub Date : 2024-10-18 DOI:10.1186/s12933-024-02453-2
Ifechukwude Ebenuwa, Pierre-Christian Violet, Hongbin Tu, Casey Lee, Nicholas Munyan, Yu Wang, Mahtab Niyyati, Kartick Patra, Kenneth J Wilkins, Nermi Parrow, Mark Levine
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Abstract

Background: Reduced red blood cell deformability (RBCD) is associated with diabetic vascular complications, but early pathophysiological RBC changes and predictive demographic and clinical factors in populations with diabetes are unclear. An understanding of early diabetes-specific RBC changes associated with impaired RBCD is essential in investigating mechanisms that predispose to diabetic vascular complications.

Methods: We conducted an outpatient cross-sectional study of participants in a well-controlled diabetes cohort (N81) and nondiabetic controls (N78) at the National Institutes of Health. First, between-group differences in RBCD measures were assessed with shear stress-gradient ektacytometry. Differences in structural RBC parameters were assessed using osmotic gradient ektacytometry and NaCl osmotic fragility. Functional RBC changes were assessed using hemoglobin-oxygen dissociation: p50.

Results: All shear-stress gradient RBCD measures were significantly altered in the diabetes cohort vs. nondiabetic controls, even after adjustment for confounding covariates (p < 0.001). Adjusted for diabetes-status and demographic factors, significant predictors of reduced RBCD included older age, Black race, male gender, hyperglycemia, and vascular complications (all p < 0.05). Reduced RBCD was also associated with aberrant osmotic-gradient parameters, with a left-shift on osmotic gradient profile indicative of dehydrated RBCs in diabetes. A structure-function relationship was observed with reduced RBCD associated with reduced osmotic fragility (P < 0.001) and increased hemoglobin-oxygen dissociation (P < 0.01).

Conclusions: Findings suggest impaired RBCD incurs similar demographic and clinical risk factors as diabetic vascular disease, with early pathophysiological RBC changes indicative of disordered RBC hydration in diabetes. Findings provide strong evidence for disordered oxygen release as a functional consequence of reduced RBCD.

Clinical trial number: NCT00071526.

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糖尿病患者红细胞变形能力的改变:临床特征和红细胞病理生理学。
背景:红细胞变形性(RBCD)降低与糖尿病血管并发症有关,但早期病理生理RBC变化以及糖尿病患者的人口和临床预测因素尚不清楚。了解与 RBCD 受损相关的早期糖尿病特异性 RBC 变化对于研究糖尿病血管并发症的诱发机制至关重要:方法:我们在美国国立卫生研究院开展了一项门诊横断面研究,研究对象是控制良好的糖尿病队列中的参与者(81 人)和非糖尿病对照组(78 人)。首先,用剪切应力梯度电子血细胞计数法评估了RBCD测量的组间差异。利用渗透梯度检测法和氯化钠渗透脆性评估了RBC结构参数的差异。使用血红蛋白-氧解离度:p50评估RBC的功能性变化:结果:糖尿病组群与非糖尿病对照组相比,所有剪切应力梯度 RBCD 测量值都发生了显著变化,即使在调整了混杂的协变量后也是如此(p 结论:糖尿病组群与非糖尿病对照组相比,所有剪切应力梯度 RBCD 测量值都发生了显著变化,即使在调整了混杂的协变量后也是如此:研究结果表明,RBCD 受损会导致与糖尿病血管疾病相似的人口和临床风险因素,早期病理生理的 RBC 变化表明糖尿病患者的 RBC 水合失调。研究结果提供了强有力的证据,证明氧释放紊乱是 RBCD 减少的功能性后果:临床试验编号:NCT00071526。
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来源期刊
Cardiovascular Diabetology
Cardiovascular Diabetology 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
12.30
自引率
15.10%
发文量
240
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Cardiovascular Diabetology is a journal that welcomes manuscripts exploring various aspects of the relationship between diabetes, cardiovascular health, and the metabolic syndrome. We invite submissions related to clinical studies, genetic investigations, experimental research, pharmacological studies, epidemiological analyses, and molecular biology research in this field.
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