Article
Transfusion of cryopreserved human red blood cells into healthy humans is associated with rapid extravascular hemolysis without a proinflammatory cytokine response.
From the Department of Surgery and Perioperative Science, Section for Sports Medicine, and the Department of Integrative Medical Biology, Section for Histology and Cell Biology, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden; and Winternet, Boden, Sweden.
Transfusion (impact factor:
3.22).
05/2012;
DOI:10.1111/j.1537-2995.2012.03710.x
Source: PubMed
-
Citations (0)
-
Cited In (0)
Data provided are for informational purposes only. Although carefully collected, accuracy cannot be guaranteed.
The impact factor represents a rough estimation of the journal's impact factor and does not reflect the actual
current impact factor.
Publisher conditions are provided by RoMEO. Differing provisions from the publisher's actual policy or licence
agreement may be applicable.
Keywords
10 healthy human volunteers
2 hours
2 units
adverse side effects
autologous RBCs
blood samples
cryopreserved autologous RBCs induced
cryopreserved RBCs
extravascular hemolysis
healthy human volunteers
macrophage inflammatory protein-1β
monocyte chemotactic protein-1
pretransfusion samples
proinflammatory cytokine production
proinflammatory cytokines interleukin
red blood cells
strong proinflammatory cytokine storm
transferin-bound serum iron
Transfusion
tumor necrosis factor-α