What Is Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate?

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • Are you looking at your blood test and wondering why your erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is so high? Or maybe you're just wondering what this test is actually looking at and what it actually does?
    So in this video, we're going to explore what erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is and what it actually means in terms of what's going on in the body to create higher or lower levels. ESR, also known as sed rate, measures the rate at which red blood cells settle in a vertical tube of blood over a specified period of time, which is one hour. The process that leads to more or less of the stacking of the red blood cells is greatly influenced by inflammation, especially the immune system and its responses to whatever is going on in the body.
    At the cellular and microscopic level, the immune response causes all kinds of different things to happen in the body. On the level of the red blood cells, it causes them to stick or stack together, which leads to a higher ESR or sed rate or erythrocyte sedimentation rate.
    How does the immune response actually do this? Well, it has to do with the things that are produced by the immune system when this is occurring. The immune system, of course, is responsible for inflammation and responding to whatever is going on, such as infections and injuries. The signals it produces cause the liver to produce something known as acute phase proteins, including things like globulins and fibrinogen.
    Fibrinogen is a relatively large protein that is normally present in the blood at very low levels. During inflammation, however, the concentration of fibrinogen significantly increases, as do these other acute phase proteins. The increased concentration of fibrinogen and the other acute phase proteins alters the surface properties of the red blood cells and the charges on those red blood cells. This process makes the surface of the red blood cells much more sticky.
    The stickiness caused by the increased concentration of these proteins and fibrinogen causes them to adhere, stick together, and form a stacking effect of those red blood cells. This aggregation of red blood cells occurs more readily in the presence of these acute phase proteins.
    Outside of fibrinogen, other examples of acute phase proteins include serum amyloid A, fibronectin, hepatoglobulin, alpha-1 antitrypsin, alpha-2 macroglobulin, ceruloplasmin, and ferritin. However, the main one affecting the clumping or stacking of red blood cells is fibrinogen. This is a protein that increases when there is tissue damage and leads to increased fibrin levels. Fibrin is needed to make scaffolding so that a clot can more easily form.
    So how is the ESR test performed?
    A blood sample is taken from your arm and placed in a vertical tube. The tube is then measured over a period of one hour. Any red blood cells that are stacked or clumped together will settle more quickly because they are heavier than the freely moving individual cells. As the red blood cells settle, they form a visible column over time. This column is then measured in millimeters per hour. The faster the red blood cells settle, the higher the millimeters or column is, and the higher your ESR level is.
    The ESR test is a nonspecific marker of inflammation because it does not directly measure the cause of inflammation, such as whether you have a bacterial infection, a fungal infection, or some other problem going on. Rather, it reflects the presence of those proteins that we described and the corresponding changes in the properties of the red blood cells that are associated with inflammation.
    So the ESR test is mainly looking for whether there is an increased production of globulins in your body. This can be very helpful and important to know because these are the things that the immune system produces when it is fighting something off.

Комментарии • 8

  • @brakeme1
    @brakeme1 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @brakeme1
    @brakeme1 7 месяцев назад +1

    Super informative for me. Would a test for fibrinogen be worth having (not as a more specific way to diagnose the inflammation but) purely to establish a point of reference? In other words would esr and fibrinogen rise and fall curve look identical? In which case following esr would suffice. Can we have a high esr but fibrinogen be low or toward normal? And, finally 😅 Could this “stickiness” of fibrinogen attract more glucose cells to adhere to the red blood cell rendering them less useful for nutrient and oxygen transport?

    • @swintegrative
      @swintegrative  7 месяцев назад +1

      The correlation of ESR and fibrinogen is very close to 1, I think closer than that of crp. Still with crp you do see a lack of coherence between the too, so I imagine it is possible but less likely with fibrinogen. I am not in the habit of running fibrinogen but it can be useful, specifically when blood vessel damage/injury is present.
      With regard to stickiness and glucose, glucose is naturally very sticky. It sticks to all kinds of proteins and is responsible for the complications of diabetes and the glycation process that gives the numerical value for A1c. Does a higher fibrinogen make glucose more sticky....? I don't know.
      Fibrinogen's main role is to promote platelet aggregation and platelet clumping to promote a clot. Soluble fibrinogen also converts to insoluble fibrin, which allows for a mesh-like network or scaffolding to form and support the platelets to further enhance a clot. Let me know if this helps clarify.

  • @osirisgonzalez5000
    @osirisgonzalez5000 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for the information. I’m about to have a liposuction, my sedimentation rate is 55 mm/h. It is safe to do the surgery?

    • @swintegrative
      @swintegrative  2 месяца назад

      Well I can’t answer that but there are several things that can raise sedimentation rate independent of inflammation. Check you my video from this last Thursday for more details but more to your question u need to ask your doctor that is clearing you for surgery

  • @MikeRicker-dy3tq
    @MikeRicker-dy3tq 5 месяцев назад

    How do you treat yourself for high ser rate cause doctors won't help you?

  • @Th3BuffGamer
    @Th3BuffGamer 5 месяцев назад

    Mine is 100x higher than it should be i guess itd because im coming off a UC flare maybe? Hopefully there is not alot of damage to my liver due to the drugs given to me by the doctors aka Prednisolone