Issue 7, 2022

Technologies for measuring red blood cell deformability

Abstract

Human red blood cells (RBCs) are approximately 8 μm in diameter, but must repeatedly deform through capillaries as small as 2 μm in order to deliver oxygen to all parts of the body. The loss of this capability is associated with the pathology of many diseases, and is therefore a potential biomarker for disease status and treatment efficacy. Measuring RBC deformability is a difficult problem because of the minute forces (∼pN) that must be exerted on these cells, as well as the requirements for throughput and multiplexing. The development of technologies for measuring RBC deformability date back to the 1960s with the development of micropipette aspiration, ektacytometry, and the cell transit analyzer. In the past 10 years, significant progress has been made using microfluidics by leveraging the ability to precisely control fluid flow through microstructures at the size scale of individual RBCs. These technologies have now surpassed traditional methods in terms of sensitivity, throughput, consistency, and ease of use. As a result, these efforts are beginning to move beyond feasibility studies and into applications to enable biomedical discoveries. In this review, we provide an overview of both traditional and microfluidic techniques for measuring RBC deformability. We discuss the capabilities of each technique and compare their sensitivity, throughput, and robustness in measuring bulk and single-cell RBC deformability. Finally, we discuss how these tools could be used to measure changes in RBC deformability in the context of various applications including pathologies caused by malaria and hemoglobinopathies, as well as degradation during storage in blood bags prior to blood transfusions.

Graphical abstract: Technologies for measuring red blood cell deformability

Article information

Article type
Tutorial Review
Submitted
23 Nov 2021
Accepted
28 Feb 2022
First published
28 Feb 2022

Lab Chip, 2022,22, 1254-1274

Technologies for measuring red blood cell deformability

K. Matthews, E. S. Lamoureux, M. Myrand-Lapierre, S. P. Duffy and H. Ma, Lab Chip, 2022, 22, 1254 DOI: 10.1039/D1LC01058A

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