The effects of splenectomy and glucocorticoids on survival and hepatic uptake of damaged red cells in the mouse

Abstract
We have studied the effects of splenectomy and glucocorticoids on the survival and sequestration of Heinz body‐containing red blood cells (RBC‐HZB). Mice were injected with phenylhydrazine damaged 51Cr labeled isologous red blood cells (RBCs). The spleen removed 36% and the liver 19% of the injected dose after 120 hrs. Red cell survival (T½) fell from 180 hrs for undamaged red cells to 16 hrs for RBC‐HZB. Splenectomy resulted in an increase in hepatic uptake of damaged RBCs (36% of the injected dose) and a modest improvement in red cell survival (T½ 54 hrs). Treatment of non‐splenectomized mice with glucocorticoids reduced the splenic uptake to 16% and the hepatic uptake to 14% of the injected dose. The reduction of splenic uptake was associated with a decrease in splenic mass rather than a decrease in uptake per unit weight of splenic tissue, while the reduction in hepatic uptake was associated with both a decrease in hepatic mass and uptake per unit weight. A marked decrease was observed in hepatic uptake and in phagocytosis by Kupffer cells in glucocorticoid‐treated splenectomized mice. These data suggest that increased hepatic uptake may decrease the effectiveness of splenectomy in RBC‐HZB hemolytic anemia and that glucocorticoids may decrease the hepatic uptake by reducing phagocytosis by Kupffer cells.