Home » BLOOD DONOR DAY: AMAZING HISTORY OF BLOOD TRANSFUSION

BLOOD DONOR DAY: AMAZING HISTORY OF BLOOD TRANSFUSION

by O. S David
BLOOD DONOR DAY: BRIEF HISTORY OF BLOOD TRANSFUSION

BLOOD DONOR DAY: BRIEF HISTORY OF BLOOD TRANSFUSION

-Ojo Oluwasegun

As the whole world celebrates the world blood donor day today 14th June 2017, it will be good to run back through the memory lane of how blood transfusion started.

In the light of this, dailyfamily.ng has taken the quest to re-access the blood transfusion metamorphosis

According to information gathered by dailyfamily.ng, blood transfusion started as far back as 17th century, where it was used as a therapy for a variety of ailments.

It must also be noted that many great advances have taken place over the years.

Below are some of the great development that has taken place over the years:

1628 English physician William Harvey discovers the circulation of blood. Shortly afterwards, the earliest known blood transfusion is attempted.

1665 The first recorded successful blood transfusion occurs in England: Physician Richard Lower keeps dogs alive by transfusion of blood from other dogs.

1818 James Blundell performs the first successful blood transfusion of human blood to treat postpartum hemorrhage.

1840 The first whole blood transfusion to treat hemophilia is successfully completed.

1900 Karl Landsteiner discovers the first three human blood groups, A, B and O.

1902 Landsteiner’s colleagues, Alfred Decastello and Adriano Sturli, add a fourth blood type, AB.

1907 Blood typing and cross matching between donors and patients is attempted to improve the safety of transfusions. The universality of the O blood group is identified.

1914 Adolf Hustin discovers that sodium citrate can anticoagulate blood for transfusion, allowing it to be stored and later transfused safely to patients on the battlefield.

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1932 The first blood bank is established at Leningrad hospital.

1939-1940 The Rh blood group is discovered and recognized as the cause behind most transfusion reactions.

1940 The US government establishes a nationwide blood collection program.

1950 Plastic bags allowing for a safer and easier collection system replace breakable glass bottles used for blood collection and storage.

1961 Platelet concentrates are recognised to reduce mortality from hemorrhaging in cancer patients.

1970 Blood banks move towards an all-volunteer donor base.

1972 The process of apheresis is discovered, allowing the extraction of one component of blood, returning the rest to the donor.

1983 Stanford Blood Center is the first blood center to screen for AIDS contaminated blood, using a surrogate test (T-lymphocyte phenotyping) two years before the AIDS virus antibody test is developed.

1985 The first HIV blood-screening test is licensed and implemented by blood banks.

1987 Stanford Blood Center is the first in the country to screen donors for Human T-Lymphotropic Virus Type I (HTLV-I), a virus believed to cause a form of adult leukemia.

1990 A specific test to identify Hepatitis C was introduced.

2002 West Nile Virus is identified as transfusion-transmissible.

 

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