Premium
Sickle red blood cells are more susceptible to in vitro haemolysis when exposed to normal saline versus Plasma‐Lyte A
Author(s) -
Blumberg Neil,
Henrichs Kelly,
Cholette Jill,
Pietropaoli Anthony,
Spinelli Sherry,
Noronha Suzie,
Phipps Richard,
Refaai Majed A.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
vox sanguinis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.68
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1423-0410
pISSN - 0042-9007
DOI - 10.1111/vox.12777
Subject(s) - haemolysis , saline , medicine , red cell , resuscitation , hypertonic saline , in vivo , red blood cell , anesthesia , endocrinology , immunology , biology , microbiology and biotechnology
Background Normal saline has been the fluid of choice for resuscitation, rehydration and fluid replacement during plasma or red cell exchange/cytapheresis. There are increased concerns about its clinical effects and data showing it causes more haemolysis in vitro than buffered solutions such as Plasma‐Lyte A. Methods We investigated whether normal saline or Plasma‐Lyte A was associated with greater haemolysis during hours of in vitro incubation with both normal red cells and samples from patients with sickle cell anaemia. Results Sickle red cells haemolysed more than normal red cells did in both crystalloid solutions. The results of 24‐hour exposure to saline were particularly striking (median of 163 mg/dl ( IQ range 105–247) for sickle red cells vs. 53 (48–92) for normal red cells ( P < 0·0001). In patient samples containing variable quantities of haemoglobin S red cells, increased haemoglobin S was associated with increased haemolysis. This effect was greater for normal saline than Plasma‐Lyte A ( P = 0·12). Conclusions These in vitro models demonstrate that short‐term ex vivo exposure of sickle red cells to normal saline leads to greater haemolysis than short‐term exposure of normal red cells, and this effect is exacerbated by normal saline. Whether use of normal saline causes increased haemolysis in vivo is unknown. Given recent evidence that normal saline increases renal failure and mortality in critically ill patients, further studies are urgently needed.