On the birefringence of healthy and malaria-infected red blood cells
Aditya K. Dharmadhikari, Himanish Basu, Jayashree A. Dharmadhikari,, Shobhona Sharma, and Deepak Mathur

TL;DR
This study investigates how malaria infection alters the birefringence and refractive index of red blood cells using polarization analysis of light transmitted through optically-trapped cells, revealing stage-dependent changes with diagnostic potential.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative method to measure birefringence and refractive index changes in red blood cells caused by malaria infection, highlighting potential for non-invasive diagnostics.
Findings
Malarial infection induces significant refractive index changes in RBCs.
Changes in birefringence depend on the stage of infection.
Refractive index variations range from 1.2 to 3×10^{-2}.
Abstract
We have probed how the birefringence of a healthy red blood cell (RBC) changes as it becomes infected by a malarial parasite. By analyzing the polarization properties of light transmitted through a single, optically-trapped cell we demarcate two types of birefringence: form birefringence which depends on the shape of the cell and intrinsic birefringence which is brought about by the presence of the parasite. We quantitatively measure changes in the refractive index as normal RBS become infected by a malarial parasite. Malarial infections are found to induce changes in the cell's refractive index whose magnitude depends on the stage of malarial infection; such changes were quantitatively explored and found to be large, in the range 1.2 to 3. Our results have implications for the development and use of non-invasive techniques that seek to quantify changes in cell properties…
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