The purpose of this study is to determine whether storage time affects how human body responds to autologous blood transfusion. An autologous blood transfusion is when a person donates blood and then receives that same blood back in the transfusion. We also want to find out if in this situation inhaled nitric oxide can help to prevent the potential reduction of vasodilation capacity. Vasodilation capacity is the ability of the blood vessel to widen when needed.
The objective of this study is to assess effects of the storage of PRBC on pulmonary vasoconstriction measured as increase in pulmonary artery pressure and endothelial function measured as a change in reactive hyperemia index in overweight people with existing endothelial dysfunction at baseline. The present study consists of three different parts, which will be scheduled in a randomized order on the same subject (crossover study). During one phase of the study, 14 healthy human volunteers will donate a unit of Packed Red Blood Cells (PRBC), which will be leukoreduced and stored in Additive Solutions-1 (AS-1), and then transfused back to the subjects after 3 days of storage at 4º C in the MGH Blood Bank (Fresh Blood arm). The second part of the study consists in the collection of another unit of PRBC from the same volunteers which will be transfused back to them after 40 days of storage (Old Blood arm). Finally in the third part, like in the second one, one unit of PRBC will be withdraw and stored for 40 days, but 80 ppm (parts per million by volume) Nitric Oxide in air will be administered together with the transfusion. There will be a 2 weeks interval after each PRBC transfusion. We hypothesize that old red blood cells stored under conventional conditions may trigger a complex, pro-inflammatory, pro-thrombotic and vasoconstriction response. We will compare the response to PRBC stored for 3 days with the response to PRBC stored for 40 days in the same healthy volunteers. We also want to test the hypothesis that inhaled nitric oxide may reverse these adverse effects. We will monitor/measure the following parameters: 1. Pulmonary vasoconstriction by trans-thoracic echocardiography 2. Endothelium-mediated changes in vascular (arterial) tone, measured as reactive hyperemia index.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
14
Withdrawal from 14 overweight volunteers of one unit of red blood cells and auto-transfusion after 3 days storage time. The same 14 subjects will be included in every arm of the study.
Withdrawal from the same 14 overweight volunteers of one unit of red blood cells and auto-transfusion after 40 days storage time.
Subjects will breath iNO (80ppm) for 10 minutes before, during and for one hour after the autologous old-blood transfusion.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Systolic Pulmonary Artery Pressure
Pulmonary vasoconstriction was measured by estimation of Systolic Pulmonary Artery Pressure in millimeter of mercury (mmHg) by trans-thoracic echocardiography
Time frame: Post-transfusion
Endothelial Function: Reactive Hyperemia Index
Reactive Hyperemia Index (RHI) measures Endothelial function and is assessed by digital pulse amplitude tonometry and it is a sensitive indicator of endothelial function. RHI is a calculated as a ratio between tested versus contralateral finger dilatation, thus there is no unit measure.
Time frame: Post-transfusion
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