- Blood Quality Diagnostic Device Detects Storage Differences Between Donors.
Blood Quality Diagnostic Device Detects Storage Differences Between Donors.
In 2013, nearly 15 million units of banked blood were transfused in the United States of America alone. Blood shortages are expected to increase globally. Donated blood is not equal due to differences in quality and deterioration rate. There are no methods to detect time-dependent biochemical and biophysical changes of red blood cells (RBCs) or the deterioration rate of donated RBCs. Nine randomly selected RBC units collected by the San Diego Blood Bank were examined for interdonor variability over six weeks of storage. In vitro RBC quality was assessed weekly by conventional biochemical tests including free Hb, K+, ATP, P50, 2,3 DPG, lactate, and pH. Deformability was measured via cell filtration. Briefly, the RBC suspension (10% Hct), was forced through a 5.0-μm pore membrane (106 mm