Specific refraction-index increments of oxygenated hemoglobin from thalassemia-minor patients are not significantly different than those from healthy individuals
Journal
Applied optics
Journal Volume
61
Journal Issue
32
Pages
9334
Date Issued
2022-11-10
Author(s)
Abstract
The mass and concentration of hemoglobin per erythrocyte are important hematological parameters. Measuring these parameters from intact erythrocytes requires the value of specific refraction-index increment (RII) of oxygenated hemoglobin, which diverges in the literature. Refractive indices of hemoglobin solutions are measured directly by digital holographic microscopy on a microfluidic channel filled with hemoglobin solutions prepared by hemolysis of fresh human erythrocytes and refractive-index standards sequentially. Hemoglobin extracted from thalassemic patients shows 3-4% higher RII than that from healthy volunteers, but the difference is not significant in comparison to inter-subject variations within each group. The quantified RIIs are applied to quantify mean corpuscular hemoglobin mass of blood from 37 human subjects, and results are in accord with standard clinical test results.
Subjects
TOMOGRAPHIC DIFFRACTIVE MICROSCOPY; DIGITAL HOLOGRAPHIC MICROSCOPY; PHASE MICROSCOPY; LIVING CELLS; REFRACTOMETRY; VOLUME
Publisher
Optica Publishing Group
Type
journal article