Although blood banks consider six weeks to be the maximum permitted storage time of blood for use in transfusion, but recent studies have suggested transfusing blood stored for more than a few weeks has adverse effects in patients undergoing cardiac surgery or critical care.
The new finding suggests a mechanism explaining why older blood might be detrimental to patient health: a deficiency in nitric oxide, a short-lived chemical messenger that relaxes blood vessels.
In the study, 43 patients at Emory University Hospital were set to receive cross-matched red blood cells for clinical indications.
Robert Neuman, cardiovascular research fellow from the Emory Clinical Cardiovascular Research Institute and his colleagues tested blood vessel function by measuring flow-mediated dilation (FMD).
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By ultrasound, they tested how much a blood vessel in the arm opens up after a blood pressure cuff is first tightened then removed. Flow-mediated dilation is an indicator of the health of the endothelial lining of the blood vessels and is a process that is dependent on nitric oxide.
Patients receiving aged blood saw their FMD halved to 2.4 per cent 24 hours after the transfusion, while patients receiving fresh blood saw no significant change in FMD.
This effect of older blood on blood vessel function is similar in size to that of eating a fatty meal, or the longterm effects of a cardiovascular disease risk factor such as smoking or diabetes.
Healthy flow-mediated dilation reflects sufficient production of nitric oxide, which is generated by the blood vessels' endothelial lining and causes them to relax. Nitric oxide is also important for delivery of oxygen by hemoglobin.
A recent study has also shown that red blood cells stored for more than three weeks lose physical flexibility.