1. Introduction
A 73-year-old lady presented with a short history of cyanosis following an overseas trip that included two long-haul flights. On examination she was found to have peripheral oxygen saturations of around 75% and cyanosis of her lips, tongue, and fingers, with otherwise normal examination findings. She was initially investigated for possible pulmonary embolism, which was excluded on computerised tomography pulmonary angiography. The patient underwent extensive investigation by the Cardiology and Respiratory services, with an ultimate exclusion of primary cardiac or respiratory pathology as the cause. Her oxygen saturation remained low and was deteriorating on repeated arterial blood gas sampling, despite normal P
aO
2 levels (around 12 kPa), and her arterial blood was observed to be chocolate brown in colour (see
Figure 1); this did not change when mixed with 100% O
2 in a syringe. Methemoglobin (MetHb) was suspected [
1], but repeated error messages for MetHb quantification were returned by arterial blood gas machines made by different manufacturers in three separate hospitals.
She was referred to a haematologist for further investigation. Hemoglobin high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and capillary electrophoresis test results were normal. An urgent referral to a National Reference Laboratory for detailed analysis of the patient’s hemoglobin, including sequencing of her globin genes, also returned normal results. Screening for paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency were negative. She was prescribed ascorbic acid 200 mg once daily for a working diagnosis of a possible methemoglobin reductase deficiency, which produced no change in her cyanosis. After a subsequent emergency room presentation with fast atrial fibrillation and dyspnoea, the patient underwent an exchange red cell transfusion in the absence of a definitive diagnosis. This resulted in a significant improvement in her symptoms; reduced cyanosis and increased her oxygen saturation but had to be repeated weekly.
A literature review identified sulfated haemoglobin (SulfHb) as another potential cause of the patient’s clinical signs [
2]. She gave a history of rheumatoid arthritis, migraines, and severe constipation, and potential sources of sulfur identified among her medications were the migraine drug rizatriptan, and a compound containing Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate) that was prescribed for constipation. The arterial blood gas machines (manufactured by Roche Global and IL Werfen) available to the authors did not have the capacity to measure SulfHb; the local Clinical Chemistry central laboratory was not able to perform spectrophotometry of haemoglobin. A Clinical Diagnostic Biotechnology start-up company (MAPSciences) had advanced mass spectrometry technology that could rapidly analyse haemoglobin and was approached to undertake analysis of the patient’s blood to establish if SulfHb was detectable.
3. Results
The addition of whole blood to ddH
2O at a dilution of 1 in 2000 not only causes red cell lysis but also the dissociation of hemoglobin into free heme and free alpha and beta globins. Furthermore, as these are the most abundant proteins in lysed blood by more than an order of magnitude, all other molecules are effectively diluted out and these red cell components dominate mass spectral analysis (
Figure 2). Sinapinic acid as a matrix preferentially ionizes large proteins and was optimised for globin analysis as previously described [
3,
4]. The spectral analysis of the patient’s globin at presentation revealed no alteration to the globin proteins.
As a relatively large amount of citrated blood had been provided, 2 mls of lysed blood was also examined by UV/visible spectroscopy. Two control samples were analysed (one male (control M) and a female (control F) with normal Hb) along with three of the patient’s samples (at presentation, immediately prior to transfusion, and post-transfusion). The expected absorption pattern is two major peaks at 550 nm (OxyHb) and 670–680 nm (DeoxyHb). A comparison of the patient’s admission sample (A) against the control (M and F) spectra shows a large increase in absorption from 600 to 700 nm in the patient’s sample, with a minor maxima/peak at 620 nm (arrowed) (see
Figure 3A).
A MALDI-ToF mass spectral analysis of the samples in the CHCA matrix revealed heme moieties at 618 m/z. However, in the patient’s samples prior to transfusion, additional peaks corresponding to heme-sulfur adduct (plus or minus hydrogen, −SH) at 652 m/z, heme-sulfur monoxide (plus or minus hydrogen, −SOH) at 668–670 m/z, and sulfur dioxide (plus or minus hydrogen, SO
2H) at 683–685 m/z (see
Figure 4A). A higher resolution image is shown in
supplemental Figure S1. These heme-sulfur adduct peaks were greatly reduced in comparison in the control samples and had largely disappeared in the patient’s repeat blood samples post-transfusion (see
Figure 4B) and after she had stopped taking magnesium sulfate (see
Table 1).
4. Discussion
This case report illustrates the diagnostic difficulties encountered when SulfHb is present and the potential for confusion with MetHb. For this reason, SulfHb has also been known as ‘pseudomethemoglobinemia’ [
5]. As demonstrated here, patients typically present with persistently low oxygen saturation on pulse oximetry, normal oxygen partial pressure on arterial blood gas sampling [
6,
7]. In addition, repeated error messages can be returned by arterial blood gas machines designed to differentiate Methemoglobin. Knowledge of the available arterial blood gas co-oximetry methodology is essential if the presence of SulfHb is suspected, as there is variation in the ability to detect the SulfHb species between co-oximeters produced by different manufacturers—many are unable to differentiate SulfHb and MetHb due to overlap between their absorption spectra [
8]. Most notably, SulfHb shares a similar absorption peak with MetHb at 630 nm, and thus a SulfHb may be reported by some systems as a MetHb. Additionally, drugs with both oxidant properties and sulfur groups can produce both SulfHb and MetHb. Gas chromatography has, until now, been considered the ‘gold standard’ technique for the identification of SulfHb [
9]. However, as seen in this case, it is frequently not readily available to the investigating clinicians. Other methods employed for establishing the presence of SulfHb are isoelectric focusing and measuring the absorption of light of blood at 630 nm after the addition of cyanide or dithionate (which diminishes absorption by MetHb, but not by SulfHb). The latest generation of co-oximeters are designed to measure SulfHb in addition to MetHb, but these are not, as yet, in widespread use in the authors’ country. The mass spectroscopic technique MALDI-ToF MS was employed after examination visible light absorption spectra of the patient’s whole blood in a commercial lab conclusively demonstrated the presence of SulfHb. Furthermore, this technique successfully identified the presence of sulfur, sulfur monoxide and dioxide bound to heme moieties (rather than hydrogen sulphide), and their reduction following exchange transfusion. The the receipt of a whole blood sample to results took no more than twenty minutes.
SulfHb is a rare complication of exposure of heme groups to sulfur. It causes the irreversible bonding of sulfur to the heme moiety, with resultant cyanosis as SulfHb does not bind oxygen. The clinical presentation is similar to that of MetHb, but it does not respond to treatment with methylene blue or ascorbic acid. However, the presence of SulfHb decreases the oxygen affinity of unaffected hemoglobin, with left-shift of the oxygen-dissociation curve and improved oxygen delivery to tissues, while the converse is true of MetHb; SulfHb thus tends to be associated with milder clinical symptoms than MetHb [
10]. There is no specific treatment for SulfHb, and in most cases described to date, clinical symptoms are mild. Where treatment is felt to be required, exchange transfusion is the intervention of choice as it can reduce the proportion of SulfHb given that, once binding of sulfur to hemoglobin has occurred, it will last for the 120-day lifespan of the erythrocyte. This clinical management strategy is reflected in the measured oxygen saturations in this patient (see
Figure 5).
From an analytical stand point, true methemoglobin is unlikely to be revealed by this direct MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry approach, as, in this condition, the heme has been oxidized from the normal ferrous (Fe2+) to the ferric state (Fe3+) and has merely lost an electron, which is a negligible mass difference.
Gas chromatography mass spectrometry has been reported to differentiate both SulfHb and MetHb from normal heme and this is because separation by this technique is first chromatographic, as a function of column absorption via differences inherent in molecular charge/polarity, and then detection is characterised by mass. However, the technique requires considerable sample pre-preparation (e.g., precipitation of heme from the blood followed by derivatisation), is technically demanding, time consuming, and expensive. Within the clinical setting, optical absorption spectrometry is bedside, rapid, and an inexpensive methodology to determine MetHb. As demonstrated here, MALDI-ToF mass spectrometry is extremely rapid, technically straight forward, negligible in analysis reagent costs, and reveals an adduct to heme that causes a change in mass, such as sulfur and its associated molecular species.
Interestingly, the “Heme-Sulfo” peaks (labelled in
Figure 4) are accompanied by satellite peaks varying in mass by precisely 1 and 2 m/z (labelled with an *). In SulfHb, gaseous hydrogen sulfide or sulfur dioxide bind to the heme of haemoglobin. Although some reports have suggested that the sulfur molecules binds to the porphyrin [
10], there is no analytical evidence to support this, and earlier chemists suggest that the interaction is probably via strong ionic, even covalent, linkage to the caged Fe ion [
11]. Nevertheless, this results in a significant increase in mass, the difference corresponding to atomic sulfur and oxygen or hydrogen, or both. If chelated to Fe, and not the porphyrin groups of the heme, hydrogen can also bind to the Fe-S complexes and the additional satellite peaks seen in this case may represent hydrogen joining the Heme Fe-S, Heme Fe-SO, and Fe-S0
2 complexes, i.e., FeSH/FeSH
2, FeOH/FeSOH
2, and FeSO
2H/FeSO
2H
2, the further increase in mass being 1 and 2 m/z. (see
supplemental Figure S1).
We have also noted that heme, upon MALDI-ToF analysis, is often accompanied by satellite peaks of an increased mass of 1 and 2 m/z presumably via similar interactions. This gives rise to the intriguing possibility that the MALDI-ToF MS technique described may possibly be able to distinguish MetHb by virtue of the fact that the ratio of the 1 and 2 m/z satellite peaks will be different depending on the patient heme being in the normal ferrous (Fe2+) or aberrant ferric (Fe3+) state. Further studies are ongoing.
For speed and ease of analysis, there is no extraction and a simple lysis, dilute, and shoot was employed. Although haemoglobin is the most abundant molecule in blood, many other components are still seen and one in 1000 or greater dilutions. These are most probably blood group antigens and components of the red blood cell cytoskeleton. Four such minor peaks resolve on the mass spectra close to that of the sulf-heme adducts (labelled with a Ψ) at 658, 672, 689, and 708 m/z, but are currently unidentified.