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Red cell storage

Journal of Proteomics, 2010
Blood component storage allows the donor and recipient to be separated in time and space. This separation converts transfusion from a desperate clinical act into a planned, orderly healthcare logistic activity with concomitant increases in both blood product availability and safety.
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Frozen Red Cells

Transfusion Medicine Reviews, 1989
The popularity and the promise of frozen red cells during the 1970s were largely attributable to logistic problems associated with 21-day storage and to the fringe benefits of white cell and plasma depletion that minimized alloimmunization and febrile transfusions and, it was speculated, reduced the risk of HBV transmission.
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Human Red Cell Peptidases

Nature, 1967
A new method for characterizing peptidases in terms of electrophoretic behaviour in starch gel and of substrate specificity is described. A survey of red cells from a large number of people has revealed genetically determined variants of two of these enzymes. Separate loci appear to be involved.
W H, Lewis, H, Harris
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RED BLOOD CELL SUBSTITUTES

Artificial Cells, Blood Substitutes, and Biotechnology, 1998
Soluble polymerized haemoglobin (polyhaemoglobin) is now in a phase III clinical trials. Patients have received up to 20 units (10 litres) in trauma surgery and other surgery. Polyhaemoglobin can be stored for more than 1 year. Haemoglobin solutions have no blood group antigen and can be used as a 'universal donor' oxygen carrier.
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PACKED RED BLOOD CELLS

Survey of Anesthesiology, 1969
AS an essential therapeutic agent in modern medical practice, human blood is clearly a valuable and limited natural resource. The total use of blood grows annually, as does the difficulty of procuring it in amounts sufficient to meet expanding needs.
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Red Blood Cell Transfusion

Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 2021
Red blood cell (RBC) transfusions are necessary to increase a patient's oxygen carrying capacity. The optimal transfusion trigger remains elusive, but a restrictive transfusion trigger of 7 g/dL has been shown in studies to reduce RBC transfusions without adversely affecting patient outcomes.
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Pediatric Red Cell Disorders and Pure Red Cell Aplasia

Pathology Patterns Reviews, 2004
Anemia in children may arise from a wide variety of pathogenetic mechanisms that include congenital and acquired disorders. Often the diagnostic considerations include disorders that are not seen commonly in adults and lifelong disorders that arise in children and persist throughout life.
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Red Cells for Transfusion

New England Journal of Medicine, 1978
The current innovation in the preservation of red cells for transfusion is adenine. Adenine in the storage medium increases ATP content and enhances red-cell viability. A formula called citrate phosphate dextrose adenine (CPDA-1) has a bright new FDA license permitting its use for the storage of whole blood or red cells for as long as 35 days.1 During ...
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Red Blood Cell Transfusions

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
To the Editor.— It is difficult for me to lend allegiance to the conclusions presented by the AMA Committee on Transfusion and Transplantation in the editorial published inThe Journal( 212 :147, 1970). Specifically, transfusion of red blood cells (RBC) rather than whole blood would certainly provide additional safety in the case of a patient who has ...
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Red cell transfusion triggers

Transfusion and Apheresis Science, 2008
The epidemiology of red cell transfusion is changing. Surgical use has decreased due to reduced transfusion triggers and better operative techniques. Medical use increases partly due to the increasing age of the population. The evidence for and against transfusion at different levels of anaemia is discussed.
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