| Literature DB >> 3133842 |
B A Maynard1, D S Smith, R P Farrar, R E Kraetsch, H Chaplin.
Abstract
Published reports have confirmed the superior sensitivity of the manual hexadimethrine bromide (Polybrene) test (MPT) for demonstrating many alloantibodies in vitro; however, the clinical significance of alloantibodies demonstrable exclusively by MPT has not been shown conclusively. A patient with macroglobulinemia experienced chills, fever, hemoglobinemia, and hemoglobinuria following the transfusion of 1 unit of red cells (RBCs) shown to be compatible by the low-ionic-strength antiglobulin (LIS-AG) method. Serologic investigation was negative. Intravascular hemolysis occurred with a second "compatible" unit. Serologic studies were again negative by LIS-AG and ficin-AG methods, but revealed anti-Jka by MPT. Both donors were Jk(a+b-), and 51Cr studies of the second donor's RBCs revealed a t1/2 of less than 30 minutes, with marked intravascular hemolysis. A LIS-AG-compatible Jk(a-) unit was transfused uneventfully, but with no rise in hematocrit. MPT next revealed anti-C; subsequent 51Cr studies with the Jk(a-), Cc donor's RBCs showed a 51Cr t1/2 of 100 minutes with slight intravascular lysis. Four transfusions of Jk(a-), C- blood were uneventful, but 5 days later the patient's hemoglobin declined. The following day, anti-E was demonstrable exclusively by MPT. 51Cr-labeled Jk(a-), C-, E- RBCs had normal 24-hour survival. The patient's hemoglobin rose to 11 g per dl following transfusions of Jk(a-), C-, E- RBCs, and he was discharged. In vitro studies employing the patient's purified IgM paraprotein revealed no interference with alloantibody binding or detection.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3133842 DOI: 10.1046/j.1537-2995.1988.28488265253.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transfusion ISSN: 0041-1132 Impact factor: 3.157