Scientific News Health care Surgery BONN SCIENTISTS DISCOVER NEW HEMOGLOBIN TYPE. INSTRUMENTS FALSELY REPORT ANOXIA IN AFFECTED PEOPLE.
BONN SCIENTISTS DISCOVER NEW HEMOGLOBIN TYPE.
INSTRUMENTS FALSELY REPORT ANOXIA IN AFFECTED PEOPLE.
Scientists at the University of Bonn have
discovered a new rare type of haemo-globin. Haemoglobin transports oxygen in the
red blood corpuscles. When bound to oxygen it changes colour. The new
haemoglobin type appears optically to be transporting little oxygen.
Measurements of the blood oxygen level therefore present a similar picture to
patients suffering from an inherited cardiac defect. After examining two
patients, the scientists now understand that the new type of haemoglobin
distorts the level of oxygen measured. The scientists have named the type 'Haemoglobin
Bonn'. They have published their discovery in the current issue of the
scientific journal 'Clinical Chemistry'. The article can be downloaded from http://www.clinchem.org/cgi/content/full/54/3/594.
Haemoglobin transports oxygen to the body's cells
and in return picks up carbon dioxide there. In doing so it changes colour. With
an optical measuring instrument, known as a pulse oximeter, you can therefore
measure whether there is enough oxygen present in the blood. The cause of anoxia
can be an inherited cardiac defect, for example.
This was also the tentative diagnosis in the case
of a four-year-old boy who was admitted to the Paediatric Clinic of the Bonn
University Clinic. However, after a thorough examin-ation, the paediatricians Dr.
Andreas Hornung and his colleagues did not find any cardiac defect. A low
saturation of oxygen had also been previously found in the blood of the boy's
41-year-old father, again without apparent signs of a cardiac defect.
Dr. Berndt Zur from Professor Birgit
Stoffel-Wagner’s team at the Institute of Clinical Chemistry and Pharmacology
examined the boy's and the father's haemoglobin. He eventually realised that
they were dealing with a new type of the blood pigment. 'The pulse oximeter is
put on a finger as a clip and X-rays it with infrared radiation,' he explains. 'Haemoglobin
absorbs infrared light in the absence of oxygen. The lower the content of oxygen
in the blood, the less light penetrates the finger and reaches the sensor of the
oximeter.' But Haemoglobin Bonn absorbs a bit more infrared light than normal
oxygen saturated haemoglobin, even when combined with oxygen. 'That’s why, at
first, we did not understand why the patients did not have any particular health
problems,' Dr. Zur says.
Every human has two main heart ventricles. One
pumps the blood through the arteries to the lungs, where the haemoglobin
releases the carbon dioxide and takes on oxygen. The other one pumps the blood
which is saturated with oxygen from the lungs to every cell in the body. Both
ventricles must be separated by a wall in the heart, so that the oxygen-rich
blood does not mix with the anoxaemic blood. But some people have a hole in this
septum. In such cases, the pulse oximeter shows anoxia. Doctors therefore see
this as a sign of a cardiac defect. Another cause is what is known as the Apnoea
Syndrome. In the patients affected, breathing can cease for more than a minute.
That is why the father of the 4-year-old received oxygen treatment at nights for
some time. 'If we had known about Haemoglobin Bonn before, father and son could
have been spared the fear of a cardiac defect or the Sleep Apnoea Syndrome,' Dr.
Zur explains.
###
Contact: Dr. Berndt Zur
berndt.zur@ukb.uni-bonn.de
49-022-828-7121
University of Bonn
Publishing date: March 24, 2008
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