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by gus_massa
1318 days ago
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> Sorry this is rambling a bit Nice write up! I'm happy with the answer, but I'd not mind if you decide to expand it. Anyway, I think it would be more useful if you reply to other questions in this thread, but you already have been doing that. I'll upvote your comment, but this is one of the ocasiones when I'd like a x2 upvote. Edit: If you don't mind a question: What do you [1] do with the people with big K that want to be blood donors? Ask them not to donate[2]? Do you tell them? Label the blood as big K and be more careful? [1] "You" as the impersonal "you". I could have written "the system" or something more accurate. [2] I guess they can donate. Otherwise they will be extremely unhappy. |
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[1,2]: Most people don't have antibodies, so big K+ blood is fine for most people (we worry about avoiding transfusing big-K positive blood into big-K negative people who will be transfused many times, such as somebody with sickle cell disease, it's not really a major issue for most people getting a rare transfusion).
So, K+ people are definitely allowed to donate. Also, there are people who have antibodies to little-k, and so they would actually need big-K homozygous blood.
When we need blood that is big-K negative, such as for a chronically transfused patient or one with antibodies to big-K, we try find units from people whose units were previously identified to be big-K negative. If they don't have any, the donor center can screen blood for them. We then verify compatibility with a crossmatch (reacting plasma from the patient with RBCs from the unit to make sure there is no reaction).
Remember there are lots of other blood types - big-K is one we have to match sometimes. Little-k is another. There are at least 70 altogether, so we can't really even try to match all of them. Even matching C, E, and K is straining the ability of the system to provide special antigen-negative blood.
It will be interesting to see what the long-term applications of lab-grown blood will be. I do worry about rare blood not being as available.