SYNOPSIS Sodium, potassium, water, and the mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration were determined in the packed erythrocytes of children with severe thalassaemia. The concentration of sodium in the packed red cells was higher than normal in a significant proportion of children with thalassaemia whereas potassium in the packed cells and sodium and potassium in the plasma were normal.On average, the cell water content was a little higher and the mean corpuscular haemoglobin concentration a little lower than normal.The cation concentrations in the packed cells of thalassaemia are compared with those in other anaemias. Similarities are pointed out between the sodium concentrations in the packed cells of thalassaemia and those from the foetus and children suffering from malnutrition.Previous work has shown that the packed erythrocytes in many anaemias contained abnormal amounts of water and cations, chiefly potassium. The concentration of potassium in the packed cells was increased in microcytic anaemias, paralleling an increase in cell water (Maizels, 1936;McCance and Widdowson, 1956). In macrocytic anaemias the small increase in potassium reported by Maizels (1936) and Iyer (1958) was not confirmed by Bertcher and Meyer (1952) and was not always accompanied by a rise in the cell water.The packed erythrocytes in spherocytic anaemias, congenital (Maizels, 1936; Selwyn and Dacie, 1954) or acquired (Selwyn and Dacie, 1954), have been shown to contain less potassium and less water than do normal cells.In congenital, non-spherocytic haemolytic anaemia the concentration of potassium and the water content of the packed red cells were high in the cases with marked macrocytosis and reticulocytosis (type I) and normal in the cases with only occasional macrocytes and ovalocytes (type II) (Selwyn and Dacie, 1954). These deviations from normal in type II have been attributed to a high proportion of reticulocytes which are known to contain more Received for publication 20 March 1961 'Supported by a grant from the Soci&t6 des Produits Nestl6, S.A., Vevey, Switzerland. potassium and more water than do mature erythrocytes (Granick, 1949;Keitel, Berman, Jones, and MacLachlan, 1955;Ponder, 1948).In all these anaemias the concentration of sodium in the packed erythrocytes was normal.The red cell potassium content was slightly low in sickle cell anaemia. During sickling the cells lost potassium and gained sodium without appreciable change in the total cation concentration or the water content (Tosteson, 1955; Tosteson, Carlsen, and Dunham, 1955; Tosteson, Shea, and Darling, 1952).Experimental post-haemorrhagic anaemia in the dog and the rabbit resulted in a rise of the concentration of potassium and, sometimes, that of magnesium in the packed erythrocytes. A greater rise of these cations was observed in the haemolytic anaemia following the administration of phenylhydrazine and was thought to reflect the high proportion of reticulocytes in both these anaemias (Henriques and 0rskov, 1939).No abnormality was found in the con...
ABSTRACT. Zoumboulakis, D., Anagnostakis, D., Kiossoglou, K., Agathopoulos, A. and Tsenghi, C. (Department of Paediatrics, Athens University, Athens, Greece). Plasma and blood volumes in severely malnourished infants. Acta Wediatr Scand, 63: 507, 1974. —This study was carried out in order to gain some insight into the plasma and blood volume fluctuations in severely malnourished infants. By means of an isotope dilution technique and microhaematocrit measurements, plasma and blood volumes were studied in 18 severely malnourished infants, aged 5 to 20 months and in 5 healthy controls, aged 3 to 20 months. Both plasma and blood volumes were found to be considerably higher in the malnourished infants (79.22±14.5 ml/kg and 119±17.8 ml/kg, respectively) than those in the controls (51.6±6.8 and 76.4±7.7 mg/kg, respectively. The differences in both instances were statistically highly significant. When, however, plasma and blood volumes were expressed not by means of the actual body weight but per kg of the expected body weight for height, there were no significant differences between malnourished (50.6±9.4 ml/kg and 76.1±12.4 ml/kg respectively), and healthy infants (51.6±6.8 ml/kg and 76.4±7.7 ml/kg respectively). These results suggest that the absolute intravascular fluid volume, which plays an important role in maintaining normal homeostasis, is unchanged in malnutrition.
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