Review Article
Triggers, Inhibitors, Mechanisms, and Significance of Eryptosis: The Suicidal Erythrocyte Death
Table 3
Diseases associated with enhanced eryptosis.
| | Diseases associated with accelerated eryptosis | References |
| | Dehydration | [188] | | Hypoxia | [189] | | Iron deficiency | [190] | | Metabolic syndrome | [191] | | Diabetes mellitus | [192] | | Phosphate depletion | [193] | | Neocytolysis | [21] | | Hemolytic anemia | [194] | | Heart failure | [195] | | Renal insufficiency | [19, 196, 197] | | Hemolytic uremic syndrome | [198] | | Sepsis | [199] | | Mycoplasma infection | [200] | | Malaria | [8, 85, 105, 201, 202] | | Sickle cell disease | [189, 203–209] | | Thalassemia | [203, 204, 206, 210, 211] | | Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency | [203, 212, 213] | | Wilson’s disease | [81] | | AE1 mutation | [214] | | GLUT1 mutation | [215] |
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