Detection of mutant hemoglobins with altered affinity for oxygen. A simplified technique.

The detection of high- or low-affinity hemoglobins in subjects with polycythemia or anemia is difficult for most physicians because of the requirement for special equipment to do oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curves. Measurement of the pH, oxygen tension, and oxygen saturation of antecubital venous blood with instruments present in most clinical chemistry laboratories permits an estimate of the strength of oxygen binding to hemoglobin. An equation can be used to convert the venous oxygen tension (standardized to pH 7.4) and the oxygen saturation to the P50 of the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve on which the observed point falls. The data indicate that this method is a reliable initial step in the identification of a hemoglobin with abnormal affinity for oxygen and may be applied to population studies, since reliable results are obtained with venous blood stored at 4 degrees C for up to 24 hours.

[1]  M. Lichtman,et al.  The Use of a Single Venous Blood Sample to Assess Oxygen Binding to Haemoglobin , 1976, British journal of haematology.

[2]  S. Balcerzak,et al.  Effect of smoking on tissue oxygen supply. , 1973, Blood.

[3]  C. Lenfant,et al.  Regulatory mechanisms of hemoglobin oxygen affinity in acidosis and alkalosis. , 1971, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[4]  J. Goldsmith,et al.  Carbon monoxide and human health. , 1968, Science.

[5]  G. Stamatoyannopoulos,et al.  Abnormal hemoglobins with high and low oxygen affinity. , 1971, Annual review of medicine.

[6]  C. Lenfant,et al.  The regulation of hemoglobin affinity for oxygen in man. , 1969, Transactions of the Association of American Physicians.