New Technology Offers Advantages for Patients and Donors
Your husband is in serious car accident and is rushed to a nearby hospital, bleeding profusely from head injuries. Your mom experiences significant blood loss during complicated open-heart surgery. We take for grantedDuring the traditional blood donation process, the donor gives a unit of whole blood - roughly a pint - which is then centrifuged, or spun out, into platelets, red cells and plasma. Recent technological advances have led to a new automated collection process, called "double red blood cell collection," that allows eligible donors to give two units of blood during one visit to the donation site, doubling the number of red cells that are obtained during the traditional method. Red blood cells make up about 40 percent of whole blood, and carry oxygen to the body's cells, while carrying carbon dioxide from these cells to the lungs so it can be eliminated through the breathing process. Red cells are often needed by heart surgery patients, bone marrow transplant recipients, sickle cell patients, accident victims and kidney, liver and heart transplant recipients.
The advantages of double red donations for the donor? Even though the process can take up to 30 minutes longer than the regular donation time of 10 minutes, double red donors can donate the same number of red cells in half the number of visits if they switch to double red donations. During double red collection, a smaller needle is used, and fluids, including the donor's own plasma along with a saline solution, are replaced, so the donors are more comfortable and better hydrated.
Eligibility requirements for double red donors are more stringent than for donors of whole blood. Male donors must be at least 5'1" and weigh at least 130 lbs. Because their blood volume is lower than that of males, females must be at least 5'5" tall and weigh at least 150 lbs. Double red donors must wait 16 weeks before donating again.




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