Sunday, June 17, 2018

The Finer Points Of A Young Blood Transfusion

By Marie Stevens


When the first creature crawled out of the water on to a primordial beach that may or may exist anymore thanks to continental drift, it must have experienced a tremendous amount of sensory overload. In the billions of years that preceded it, nothing had experienced the earth. IT was the first creature to ever be dry, to feel the heat of the sun on its back, the feel the wind of what was presumably a face of some sort. There was no way for it to imagine, to comprehend, just how important it was to the world at large. There was no way it could have known that how it would affect the course of the planet. But without, it is highly unlikely that terrestrial life would have ever evolved. No cars, no cities, no young blood transfusion.

In essence, a blood transfusion is when body fluid from a person is taken out of them. This is then injected into another person. However, both people will have to have to same blood type, otherwise the body of the receiver may reject the donation.

Transfusions become necessary when a being loses too much blood, either through internal or external bleeding. A tranfusion can also be deemed medically necessary is a being is infected with a disease that targets the plasma. In both cases, individual is going to need an infusion of clean blood.

There is a special pump for extracting lifeblood. A donor who has been properly screened will often lie at a relaxing angle, have the needle attached to device stuck into their arm, and then the machine will do its thing and start extracting the plasma. The blood then goes into a bag and is ten slowly introduced into the system of a recipient.

A, B, AB, and O. Under normal circumstances, those are just letter. Largely meaningless without other letters around to support them and form words. But in transfusion, these letters are highly important. Human bodies are each unique unto themselves. The material that flows in those veins however, is a little less special. They can each be classified into four distinct groups, with positive and negative signs attached, based on whether or not it carries a special protein.

Mixing two or more types can be dangerous. A person with type A should receive from other people who are also Type A or people who are O negative, as those individuals are universal donors. A person who is type AB is fortunate enough to be able to receive donations from all types of donors. It is essential to make sure that all types are compatible, as getting it wrong can result in the death of a patient.

There are ways to make sure that only compatible types are used. For one, potential donors are screened and tested beforehand. These donors must are subject to an interview that may or may not get too personal and they must also be in good health at the time of a donation.

A person may be disqualified from donating if they are sick. They can also be disqualified if they have donated very recently. If a person has some kind of disease, like HIV or AIDS, then they will absolutely not be allowed to give blood for fear of spreading their infection.

The interconnected systems of the human body were designed to work in tandem with one another. To do, there has to be a facilitator. That is the brain. But the other parts are just as necessary. But sometimes, an individual can miss some vital parts. But those parts can be given freely by another person.




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