RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To investigate if blood hyperviscosity in RA patients is due to a reduced erythrocyte deformability and, therefore, turning it into a reliable activity indicator, as well as a therapy follow-up marker for this pathology. METHODS: (1) The haemorheological profile consisting of erythrocyte deformability, blood and plasma viscosity, and erythrocyte membrane fluidity was determined in 24 AR patients and 17 healthy controls. (2) A 4 year follow-up was carried on in 16 patients monitoring blood viscosity, erythrocyte deformability and biochemical variables in relation to clinical assessment of disease activity (Disease Activity Score "DAS 28-4"). RESULTS: Erythrocyte deformability and membrane fluidity were impaired in RA patients compared to controls (p<0.001). Blood viscosity was significantly increased and correlated with the cell rigidity index (r=0.85, p<0.0000) in RA patients. The follow-up showed a good correlation between haemorheological parameters and DAS 28-4 during disease evolution. CONCLUSION: our results support the hypothesis that in RA, blood hyperviscosity is determined by deformability loss, which in turn is due to a membrane rigidization. This could evidenced that a widespread cell membrane damage is expressed through an impaired erythrocyte deformability, turning haemorheological parameters into reliable tools to study disease evolution. The follow-up study enabled us to confirm that erythrocyte deformability is an efficient indicator of rheumatoid arthritis activity.