Abstract

It has been previously reported that the post-thaw hemolysis of erythrocytes, frozen under various conditions, depends upon the initial cell concentration; increasing the cell concentration decreases the proportion of intact cells after freeze-thawing. In the present study, the effect of cell concentration upon post-thaw hemolysis, examined mainly by the morphological observation of freezing patterns in specimens with or without cryoprotectant glycerol, was most marked in concentrated cell suspensions in which the cells had become shrunken as a result of extracellular freezing. The addition of glycerol lessened the packing effect progressively as the concentration was increased. The results thus obtained may be explained by assuming that cells, deformed in the freezing process, and rigid at low temperatures, might undergo mechanical damage when subjected to compression and abnormal contact.

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