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Old 10-10-2007, 08:39 AM
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Studies: Stored Blood Lacks Nitric Oxide - PhysOrg

"It doesn't matter how much oxygen is being carried by red blood cells, it cannot get to the tissues that need it without nitric oxide," said Dr. Jonathan Stamler of Duke University, leader of one of the research groups.


Studies: Stored Blood Lacks Nitric Oxide

Studies: Stored Blood Lacks Nitric Oxide



(AP) -- Much of the stored blood given to millions of people every year may lack a component vital for it to deliver oxygen to the tissues. Nitric oxide, which helps keep blood vessels open, begins breaking down as soon as blood goes into storage, two research teams report in separate studies in this week's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

In recent years, doctors have become increasingly concerned about levels of heart attack and stroke in patients receiving transfusions and the new findings may help explain that.

"It doesn't matter how much oxygen is being carried by red blood cells, it cannot get to the tissues that need it without nitric oxide," said Dr. Jonathan Stamler of Duke University, leader of one of the research groups.

Blood vessels relax and constrict to regulate blood flow and nitric oxide opens up blood vessels, allowing red blood cells to deliver oxygen, he explained.

"If the blood vessels cannot open, the red blood cells back up in the vessel and tissues go without oxygen. The result can be a heart attack or even death," he said.

"The issue of transfused blood being potentially harmful to patients is one of the biggest problems facing American medicine," said Stamler.

Several of the researchers, including Stamler, have consulting and/or equity relationships with Nitrox/N30, a company developing nitric oxide based therapies.

The second research team, led by Dr. Timothy McMahon, also at Duke, studied the changes in stored blood over time. Currently blood is allowed to be kept in blood banks for up to 42 days. After that it must be discarded. An estimated 14 million units of red blood cells are administered to about 4.8 million Americans annually.

"We were surprised at how quickly the blood changes - we saw clear indications of nitric oxide depletion within the first three hours," McMahon said in a statement.

Stamler said in a telephone interview that the researchers knew that nitric oxide is responsible for opening up small blood vessels, but had not previously measured the amount of that chemical in stored blood.

"Surprisingly, we found blood depleted profoundly by day one and it remained depleted through day 42," he said.

But if they restored the nitric oxide at any point, the red blood cells were again able to open blood vessels and deliver oxygen to tissues, they said. They tested the blood with added nitric oxide both in the laboratory and in dogs.

"This is an important observation and it needs to be followed up," said Dr. Louis Katz, a past president of America's Blood Centers, which provides about half the nation's blood.

"If you are going to store red cells, is there a way to make sure appropriate nitric oxide levels are maintained?" said Katz, who was not part of the research teams.

It is possible that these findings may make the public concerned about transfusions, Katz said: "There is no doubt, if you are bleeding to death from a trauma" you need a transfusion.

Stamler agreed that "physicians need to be able to give blood if people are bleeding profusely."

Overall, Katz said: "This is neat research. It needs to be proven that it's clinically relevant."

Stamler agreed on the need for clinical trials.

"Banked blood is truly a national treasure that needs to be protected," Stamler said. "Blood can be life saving, only it is not helping the way we had hoped and in many cases it may be making things worse. In principle, we now have a solution to the nitric oxide problem - we can put it back - but it needs to be proven in a clinical trial."

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, Duke Anesthesiology Fund, the American Heart Association and N30 Pharma, which has a license agreement with Duke to develop nitric oxide-based therapies.
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Old 10-12-2007, 08:03 AM
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Sorry I haven't been able to be part of No Blood for such a long time.But this study reveals a really important finding, it has even found its way into Indian Newspapers.
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Old 10-21-2007, 02:37 PM
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Here's a video of Dr Stamler talking about the problem with nitric oxide depletion in stored blood.

YouTube - Duke studies: Banked blood doesn't deliver oxygen

What the public and many health professionals are unaware of is that even if they solve this problem by perfusing stored blood with nitric oxide (a free radical that can damage body cells) stored blood is still unable to oxygenate the tissues efficiently. There are two additional reasons for this.

1) Stored blood lacks adenosine triphosphate (ATP), a substance that helps fresh red blood cells to maintain their deformability. Red cells need to be deformable, that is, to change their shape from round to torpedo-shaped so as to be able to navigate capillaries that narrow down to 6 or 7 microns. If the cells lose their deformability they will get stuck in the capillaries and not reach the tissues with their precious oxygen load.

2) Stored blood lacks 2,3-diphosphoglycerate (2,3-DPG), a chemical that "tells" the hemoglobin in the red blood cells to offload its cargo of oxgen to the tissue beds. Insufficient
2,3-DPG will result in the oxygen being carried by the blood remaining unavailable to the body's cells and organs. In this circumstance, carbon dioxide is not carried away and toxic wastes can build up in the system.

Thus, banked blood may be little more than a volume expander in an emergency. Clinical studies have also shown that banked blood may do more harm than good in critically ill patients. Meanwhile this dangerous product, of dubious effectiveness, continues to be given to patients by healthcare professionals with scant regard for the consequences -- short- or long-term.
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Old 10-22-2007, 01:01 AM
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The link works some times and not others -- it's a puzzle!
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Old 10-22-2007, 06:52 AM
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The Doctors

It is my belief that most physician's have a high regard for patient safety. From the patients point of view this may not always be obvious. Doctors are not as independent as some think. They are bound to the protocols of their specialty. When it comes to the use of blood and blood products some have seen fit to take a leadership role in using alternative treatment modalities. Others have chosen to stay with traditional accepted and suggested protocols. I find it hard to fault them for following their training. However, I for one am very glad that the weight of evidence against using blood in its traditional role seems to be increasing to the point where past protocols will now change thus allowing the pack to follow the leaders.

All the best.
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Old 10-22-2007, 07:02 PM
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I didn't mean to imply that doctors don't care about their patients. Many are just not fully informed about the risks and complications of blood transfusions, nor about the alternatives. As you say, they genuinely believe they are doing what's best for their patients, because that's what they have been taught. But now that the word is out that stored blood may do more harm than good, will they stop using it until the new process for putting nitric oxide back into blood goes through the necessary clinical trials and gets approval?
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Old 10-25-2007, 12:20 PM
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Changing Practice

I doubt they will stop using it, but once again we should see an incremental decrease in transfusion rates.

Years ago I learned that the early adoptors changed their practices as soon as they saw a better way. A few colleagues follow them. The pack waits until the science is in, but even in that group adoption times vary. Some want a little proof, some want alot of proof, some need to be forced into change by policy. It's the same with any subset of humans.

All the best.
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