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Donald L. Rucknagel

Simpson University

Publishes on Hemoglobinopathies and Related Disorders, Iron Metabolism and Disorders, Erythrocyte Function and Pathophysiology. 110 papers and 2.7k citations.

110Publications
2.7kTotal Citations

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Incentive Spirometry to Prevent Acute Pulmonary Complications in Sickle Cell Diseases
Paul S. Bellet, Karen Kalinyak, Rakesh Shukla et al.|New England Journal of Medicine|1995
Cited by 288

BACKGROUND: This study was designed to determine the incidence of thoracic bone infarction in patients with sickle cell diseases who were hospitalized with acute chest or back pain above the diaphragm and to test the hypothesis that incentive spirometry can decrease the incidence of atelectasis and pulmonary infiltrates. METHODS: We conducted a prospective, randomized trial in 29 patients between 8 and 21 years of age with sickle cell diseases who had 38 episodes of acute chest or back pain above the diaphragm and were hospitalized. Each episode of pain was considered to be an independent event. At each hospitalization, patients with normal or unchanged chest radiographs on admission were randomly assigned to treatment with spirometry or to a control nonspirometry group. Each patient in the spirometry group took 10 maximal inspirations using an incentive spirometer every two hours between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. and while awake during the night until the chest pain subsided. A second radiograph was obtained three or more days after admission, or sooner if clinically necessary, to determine the incidence of pulmonary complications. Bone scanning was performed no sooner than two days after hospital admission to determine the incidence of thoracic bone infarction. RESULTS: The incidence of thoracic bone infarction was 39.5 percent (15 of 38 hospitalizations). Pulmonary complications (atelectasis or infiltrates) developed during only 1 of 19 hospitalizations of patients assigned to the spirometry group, as compared with 8 of 19 hospitalizations of patients in the nonspirometry group (P = 0.019). Among patients with thoracic bone infarction, no pulmonary complications developed in those assigned to the spirometry group during a total of seven hospitalizations, whereas they developed during five of eight hospitalizations in the nonspirometry group (P = 0.025). CONCLUSIONS: Thoracic bone infarction is common in patients with sickle cell diseases who are hospitalized with acute chest pain. Incentive spirometry can prevent the pulmonary complications (atelectasis and infiltrates) associated with the acute chest syndrome in patients with sickle cell diseases who are hospitalized with chest or back pain above the diaphragm.

Phosphatidylserine externalization in sickle red blood cells: associations with cell age, density, and hemoglobin F
Cited by 114Open Access

Phosphatidylserine (PS) is normally confined to the cytoplasmic leaflet of the red blood cell (RBC) membrane, but some sickle RBCs expose PS in the outer leaflet (PS+ cells). This study examined the relationships among PS externalization, fetal hemoglobin content, hydration state, and cell age. Sickle RBCs exhibit a wide range of PS externalization. Those with low-level exposure (type 1 PS+) include many young transferrin-receptor-positive (TfR+) cells. This is not specific for sickle cell disease because many nonsickle TfR+ cells are also PS+. RBCs with higher PS exposure (type 2 PS+) appear to be more specific for sickle cell disease. Their formation is most likely sickling dependent because type 2 PS+ dense sickle cells have a lower percentage of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) than PS- cells in the same density fraction (1.7 vs 2.9; n = 8; P <.01). In vivo experiments using biotin-labeled sickle cells showed a sharp decrease in the percentage of circulating, labeled PS+ cells in the first 24 hours after reinfusion. This decrease was confined to type 1 PS+ cells and was thus consistent with the reversal of PS exposure in very young cells. As the labeled cells aged in the circulation, the percentages of type 1 and type 2 PS+ cells increased. These studies indicate that PS externalization in sickle cells may be low level, as observed in many immature cells, or high level, which is associated with dehydration and appears to be more specific for sickle RBCs.

The effect of fetal hemoglobin on the survival characteristics of sickle cells
Cited by 112Open Access

The determinants of sickle red blood cell (RBC) life span have not been well-defined but may include both intrinsic factors (eg, the tendency to sickle) and extrinsic factors (eg, the capacity of the reticuloendothelial system to remove defective RBCs). Fetal hemoglobin (HbF) is heterogeneously distributed among sickle RBCs; F cells contain 20% to 25% HbF, whereas the remainder have no detectable HbF (non-F cells). Autologous sickle RBCs were labeled with biotin and reinfused to determine overall survival, non-F- and F-cell survival, and time-dependent changes in HbF content (%HbF) for the surviving F cells. A total of 10 patients were enrolled, including 2 who were studied before and after the percentage of F cells was increased by treatment with hydroxyurea. As expected, F cells survived longer in all subjects. Non-F-cell survival correlated inversely with the percentage of F cells, with the time for 30% cell survival ranging from 6 days in patients with more than 88% F cells to 16 days in patients with less than 16% F cells. As the biotin-labeled RBCs aged in the circulation, the HbF content of the surviving F-cell population increased by 0.28%/d +/- 0.21%/d, indicating that within the F-cell population those with higher HbF content survived longer.

Homozygous Hb J Tongariki: Evidence for Only One Alpha Chain Structural Locus in Melanesians
Cited by 87

A high frequency of Hb J Tongariki (alpha 115 Ala --> Asp) was found in a Kilenge village in New Britain. Heterozygotes had 45 to 50 percent of the Hb J component (determined by cellulose acetate electrophoresis). Two homozygotes for Hb J had no Hb A, suggesting that in this family only one Hbalpha structural locus is present.