View Full Version : Giving Blood
TheGreatSatan
06-29-2010, 06:11 PM
I donate blood to the Red Cross every 56 days or so, sometimes I go a little more. Today in St Louis the Cardinals baseball team were sponsoring the blood drive at a local recreation center. I went as always to donate blood and since my wife is a huge fan she got to meet one of the players (McClellan or something) and get a T-Shirt. He was real cool and took a pic with her and signed the shirt, which made her happy.:daydream:
During the blood drawing my vein stopped giving up blood, so they turned and twisted it to get it going again without success. They had it too deep and I could feel it hitting lots of things besides my vein. They had to pull it out and asked if they could do the other arm instead. I obliged and they were nearing the end and it stopped again!
They asked my permission to restick the other arm again in a different spot to get the last little out and I said yes. Because without having all of the blood properly they would have to toss my donation all together.
The lady started to prep my 3rd spot and told me to squeeze the ball to get my vein to pop. They hadn't fully gauzed the first spot and when I pumped the ball my blood sprayed out!!:eek:
You should have seen they're faces! I was grabbing paper towels and holding it down while the blood poured out all over my arm and hand. :DI laughed the whole time, and I'm sure from a distance I looked like a complete psycho.
Anyway I did finally finish and get the right amount of donation out and I'm fine. Well, except for a bit of bruising.
It was just really funny and I had to share.
Mark_Hardware
06-29-2010, 06:39 PM
Lol trust me, if it's the first time it's happened to them, it won't be the last. Just try to make sure you are well hydrated when you go, that should help. :) ( I used to do that for a living)
Bopher
06-30-2010, 05:20 AM
I'd love to donate but I am not allowed. When my Dad was Air Force we spent '83 to '91 stationed in the UK and they had that whole Mad Cow thing going on and the US government used local beef to supply the commissaries instead of shipping across the pond. So potentially I could of gotten Mad Cow infected meat. They don't know if you can get it that way and the only test right now is to slice my head open and look at the brain (ain't happening):eek::eek:
dr.walrus
06-30-2010, 06:17 AM
I donate blood to the Red Cross every 56 days or so, sometimes I go a little more.
I think you're only legally allowed to do it 4 times a years over here!
The blood bank I'm a member of, I think it's a max of once every 56 days or so, or twice that if you do their new...somethingphoresis..somethingsomething..inste ad of just taking out whole blood and being done with it, they take it out, separate out the red blood cells, keep those, and put everything else back it. It takes about twice as long, but they get twice as many red blood cells and it takes less of a toll on your system. Feels really weird though, because when they put it back in it's cold (room temp in an air-conditioned building), and it takes a while for it to warm back up to body temp...so you can feel it flowing back through your system. Very strange sensation, that, especially when it gets to your heart. They'll only ask certain blood types to do it though, I think A and O. Gotta love us O's. :P
Airbozo
06-30-2010, 02:31 PM
O+ FTW!
I used to give blood many moons ago and then go drinking afterward. It was a cheap buzz since you didn't have to drink that much to get tipsy.
Now they don't let me give blood since I am exposed to poison oak at my house.
Bopher
06-30-2010, 02:59 PM
The blood bank I'm a member of, I think it's a max of once every 56 days or so, or twice that if you do their new...somethingphoresis..somethingsomething..inste ad of just taking out whole blood and being done with it, they take it out, separate out the red blood cells, keep those, and put everything else back it. It takes about twice as long, but they get twice as many red blood cells and it takes less of a toll on your system. Feels really weird though, because when they put it back in it's cold (room temp in an air-conditioned building), and it takes a while for it to warm back up to body temp...so you can feel it flowing back through your system. Very strange sensation, that, especially when it gets to your heart. They'll only ask certain blood types to do it though, I think A and O. Gotta love us O's. :P
I think that's donating just the plasma, which I still can't do:(, there's a company down in Cheyenne called BioLife that does the same thing and they pay you $20 each time you go. And because its just the plasma you can donate like 10 times a month. If I could of done it I know where my modding budget would have been coming from. ;)
I think that's donating just the plasma, which I still can't do:(, there's a company down in Cheyenne called BioLife that does the same thing and they pay you $20 each time you go. And because its just the plasma you can donate like 10 times a month. If I could of done it I know where my modding budget would have been coming from. ;)
Actually it's the other way around. Plasma (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_plasma) is the stuff that the blood cells float around in, and is (iirc) universally swappable, no matter what your blood type. It's the red blood cells that have the markers on them (A, B, +) that prompt rejection in people with incompatible blood types. So, they can get plasma from anyone, but getting the actual red blood cells is more of a problem for some patients, which I'm guessing is why they started doing this. It pulls twice the red blood cells as normal, but they require waiting twice as long between donations (~104 days, iirc).
Bopher
06-30-2010, 03:17 PM
Oops. Got it all backwards. I think I'll stick with computers and leave medicine to the pros.:)
TheGreatSatan
06-30-2010, 03:19 PM
Yep, you can donate whole blood, platelets, or plasma. The plasma wasn't worth the money. It took a couple of hours and they pull it out, separate it then put it back in real cold and painful. A process called Apheresis, I think pulls out the blood and separates it and they keep them both.
So, interesting thing I just found out. OOC, I looked up the distribution of the different blood types, and what I found surprised me. For some reason I had always thought that O was the rarest type, and AB was the most common. Turns out it's actually the other way around. Globally it goes:
O+ : 36.44%
A+ : 28.27%
B+ : 20.59%
AB+ : 5.06%
O- : 4.33%
A- : 3.52%
B- : 1.39%
AB- : 0.45%
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_type#ABO_and_Rh_distribution_by_country
So actually, that makes the whole thing seem a lot less bleak. :D Yeah, sure, I can only get transfusions from two different types, but one of those is the most common in the world!
I forget the genetics involved, which are dominant, or even if they're multigenic traits or not, but I'm guessing both from that distribution and my family that the + identifier is dominant. My parents are both O, one + and one -, and I'm +.
Luthien
06-30-2010, 09:07 PM
According to what you found out, my blood type is more rare than I thought. I'm A-. I don't know about the + being dominant though because my mom is O+ and my dad is A- like I am. I used to donate blood but I went out of the country on a cruise and had about a 6 year wait. Now I can't give blood anyway because I'm on bloodthinners for a blood condition I was diagnosed with last year.
d_stilgar
07-01-2010, 12:35 AM
I'll give blood when it's convenient. I need to find somewhere local that I can go often. I've had my fun stories (didn't tighten the rubber band so I overfilled a bag in just a couple minutes, passed out as they took the last vial so the whole thing wasn't a loss).
I'm B+, which is a good motto if you ask me. I've also got a very very high platelet count so they've been asking me to come in and do platelet donations. I really want to. It feels good to donate and help. Blood actually has a really short shelf life.
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