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Blood Basics > The Blood Supply
Making the Blood Supply Safer
Enhancements to the safety of blood transfusion over the last decade have been
dramatically effective, especially with regard to reducing the likelihood of a
transfusion-transmitted infection. The most important contributors to this safety are the
extensive health history questionnaires that all donors must complete and the highly
sophisticated laboratory testing that all donated blood undergoes.
Although any further increases in safety may be so small
that it will be difficult to do studies large enough to reveal
any improvement, researchers are focusing their attention
in two areas. Bacterial contamination is a rare problem
that occasionally complicates platelet transfusions. Part of
the reason for this is that platelets have to be stored at
room temperature, since they are damaged by
refrigeration. Other blood products are stored at colder
temperatures that would ordinarily discourage bacterial
growth. Research aimed at identifying platelets that are
contaminated with bacteria has taken a number of
different directions. These include rapidly culturing platelets before they are released
for transfusion; looking for changes in oxygen concentration of stored platelets that
contain bacteria; testing for the presence of bacterial proteins in stored platelets; and
using dielectrophoresis, a method which relies on the different behavior of bacteria in
an electric field.
The other area for current research into improvements in transfusion safety involves
pathogen detection and inactivation. The term "pathogen" recognizes the fact that while
viruses and bacteria are usually the culprits, if a transfusion-transmitted infection
occurs, other organisms, such as parasites, are also implicated, though rarely.
Research in this area includes studies that safely add chemical compounds, which
selectively target and destroy the pathogens. Various methods that are under
investigation, however, require significant changes in how blood is processed before it
is distributed for transfusion. For example, one procedure requires that blood be
exposed to ultraviolet irradiation after the addition of a pathogen-targeting chemical.
Much attention has to be paid, whichever process is being used, to ensuring that blood
is washed free of any of the additives that were used to inactivate contaminating
organisms.
-- Merlyn H. Sayers, M.D., Ph.D
President & CEO
Carter BloodCare
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