ABSTRACT. Filtration techniques are widely used to assess red blood cell (RBC) deformability and flow behavior of RBC in microcirculation. In this study filtration rates of RBC from 10 very low birth weight infants (24-30 wk gestation), 10 more mature preterm infants (31-36 wk gestation), 10 full-term neonates, and 10 adults were measured by using Nucleopore filters with pore diameters of 5 pm and filtration pressures of 1, 2,5, and 10 cm H20. The major results follow: 1) At each of four filtration pressures, filtration rates of washed RBC were significantly ( p < 0.05) lower in the preterm infants than in the term neonates who in turn showed lower values than adults. The differences among the four groups became less as the pressure was increased from 1 to 10 cm H20.2) The filtration rates increased with decreasing MCV (r = -0.86).3) The filter flow resistance (computed as ratio of filtration pressure and filter flow rate) decreased as the filtration pressure was raised from 1 to 10 cm H20. The largest drop, 31% ( p < 0.05), was observed in the most immature infants, the smallest, 10% (p > 0.05), was seen in adults. 4) At a pressure of 1 cm H 2 0 the calculated mean transit time for RBC through the 5-pm pores was on an average 3.7 times longer in the smallest preterm infants than in the adults (19.7 f 7.8 and 5.3 f 1.4 ms, respectively), whereas the factor was only 2.7 at a pressure of 10 cm H20 (13 t 0.4 and 0.5 f 0.1 ms, respectively). 5) Filtration rates of whole blood were determined at a pressure of 10 cm H20. These filtration rates were significantly (p < 0.05) less compared with filtration rates of washed RBC. The largest difference was observed in the smallest preterm infants (-77%), the smallest difference in adults (-41%). In conclusion, the filtration rate of RBC from preterm and term neonates may be lower than that of adults because of the larger size of neonatal RBC. At high pressure, filterability of neonatal RBC improves, possibly because of decreased resistance of neonatal RBC to elastic deformation. Filtration of whole blood from neonates may, in addition, be impaired because of the higher number of poorly deformable leukocytes and erythroblasts. (Pediatr Res 20:1269Res 20: -1273Res 20: , 1986 Abbreviations RBC, red blood cells PBS, phosphate buffered saline MCV, mean corpuscular volume Hyperviscosity in neonates is a frequent and potentially serious condition, which may cause circulatory failure and impaired microcirculation in various vital organs (1). Blood viscosity is mainly determined by hematocrit. However, decreased RBC deformability can also contribute to an increase in blood viscosity. At high hematocrit, the deformability of RBC is particularly crucial because blood viscosity exhibits a larger increase with increasing hematocrit when RBC deformability is impaired (2). Moreover, decreased RBC deformability may hinder the entry of 8-pm diameter RBC into capillaries with diameters of 3-4 pm (3), slow down oxygen uptake and release in capillaries (4), and block the passage through narrow ...
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