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Jhargram
Voluntary Blood Donors’ Society
HIGHLIGHTS
OF TRANSFUSION MEDICINE HISTORY 1628 English physician William Harvey discovers the
circulation of blood. Shortly afterward, the earliest known blood transfusion
is attempted. In 1665 the first recorded successful blood transfusion
occurs in England: Physician Richard
Lower keeps dogs alive by transfusion of blood from other dogs. 1667 Jean-Baptist Denis in France and Richard Lower in
England separately report successful transfusions from lambs to humans.
Within 10 years, law because of reactions prohibits transfusing the blood of
animals to humans. 1795 In Philadelphia, American physician Philip Syng
Physick, performs the first human blood transfusion, although he does not
publish this information. 1818 James Blundell, a British obstetrician, performs
the first successful transfusion of human blood to a patient for the
treatment of postpartum hemorrhage. Using the patient's husband as a donor,
he extracts approximately four ounces of blood from the husband's arm and,
using a syringe, successfully transfuses the wife. Between 1825 and 1830, he performs 10 transfusions, five of which
prove beneficial to his patients, and publishes these results. He also
devises various instruments for performing transfusions and proposed rational
indications. 1840 At St. George's School in London, Samuel Armstrong
Lane, aided by consultant Dr. Blundell, performs the first successful whole
blood transfusion to treat hemophilia. 1867 English surgeon Joseph Lister uses antiseptics to
control infection during transfusions. 1873-1880 US physicians transfuse milk (from cows,
goats, and humans). 1884 Saline infusion replaces milk as a “blood
substitute” due to the increased frequency of adverse reactions to milk. 1900 Karl Landsteiner, an Austrian physician, discovers
the first three human blood groups, A, B, and C. Blood type C was later
changed to O. His colleagues Alfred Decastello and Adriano Sturli add AB, the
fourth type, in 1902. Landsteiner receives the Nobel Prize for Medicine for
this discovery in 1930. 1907 Hektoen suggests that the safety of transfusion
might be improved by crosshatching blood between donors and patients to
exclude incompatible mixtures. Reuben Ottenberg performs the first blood
transfusion using blood typing and cross matching in New York. Ottenberg also
observed the mendelian inheritance of blood groups and recognized the
“universal” utility of group O donors. 1908 French surgeon Alexis Carrel devises a way to prevent
clotting by sewing the vein of the recipient directly to the artery of the
donor. This vein-to-vein or direct method, known as anastomosis, is practiced
by a number of physicians, among them J.B. Murphy in Chicago and George Crile
in Cleveland. The procedure proves unfeasible for blood transfusions, but
paves the way for successful organ transplantation, for which Carrel receives
the Nobel Prize in 1912. 1908 Moreschi describes the antiglobulin reaction. The
antiglobulin is a direct way of visualizing an antigen-antibody reaction that
has taken place but is not directly visible. The antigen and antibody react
with each other, then, after washing to remove any unbound antibody, the
antiglobulin reagent is added and binds between the antibody molecules that
are stuck onto the antigen. This makes the complex big enough to see. 1912 Roger Lee, a visiting physician at the Massachusetts
General Hospital, along with Paul Dudley White, develops the Lee-White
clotting time. Adding another important discovery to the growing body of
knowledge of transfusion medicine, Lee demonstrates that it is safe to give
group O blood to patients of any blood group, and that blood from all groups
can be given to group AB patients. The terms "universal donor" and
"universal recipient" are coined. 1914 Long-term
anticoagulants, among them sodium citrate, are developed, allowing longer
preservation of blood. 1915 At Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York, Richard Lewisohn
uses sodium citrate as an anticoagulant to transform the transfusion
procedure from direct to indirect. In addition, Richard Weil demonstrates the
feasibility of refrigerated storage of such anticoagulant blood. Although
this is a great advance in transfusion medicine, it takes 10 years for sodium
citrate use to be accepted. 1916 Francis Rous and J.R.Turner introduce a
citrate-glucose solution that permits storage of blood for several days after
collection. Allowing for blood to be stored in containers for later
transfusion aids the transition from the vein-to-vein method to indirect
transfusion. This discovery also allows for the establishment of the first
blood depot by the British during World War I. Oswald Robertson, an American
Army officer, is credited with creating the blood depots. Robertson received
the AABB Land Steiner Award in 1958 as developer of the first blood bank. 1927-1947 The MNSs and P systems are discovered. MNSs
and P are two more blood group antigen systems — just as ABO is one system
and Rh is another. 1932 The first blood
bank is established in a Leningrad hospital. 1937 Bernard
Fantus, director of therapeutics at the Cook County Hospital in Chicago,
establishes the first hospital blood bank in the United States. In creating a
hospital laboratory that can preserve and store donor blood, Fantus
originates the term "blood bank." Within a few years, hospital and
community blood banks begin to be established across the United States. Some
of the earliest are in San Francisco, New York, Miami, and Cincinnati. 1939/40 The Rh
blood group system is discovered by Karl Land Steiner, Alex Wiener, Philip
Levine, and R.E. Stetson and is soon recognized as the cause of the majority
of transfusion reactions. Identification of the Rh factor takes its place
next to the discovery of ABO as one of the most important breakthroughs in
the field of blood banking. 1940 Edwin Cohn, a
professor of biological chemistry at Harvard Medical School, develops cold
ethanol fractionation, the process of breaking down plasma into components
and products. Albumin, a protein with powerful osmotic properties, plus gamma
globulin and fibrinogen are isolated and become available for clinical use.
John Elliott develops the first blood container, a vacuum bottle extensively used
by the Red Cross. 1940 The United
States government establishes a nationwide program for the collection of
blood. Charles R. Drew develops the “Plasma for Britain” program — a pilot
project to collect blood for shipment to the British Isles. The American Red
Cross participates, collecting 13 million units of blood by the end of World
War II. 1941 Isodor Ravdin,
a prominent surgeon from Philadelphia, effectively treats victims of the
Pearl Harbor attack with Cohn's albumin for shock. Injected into the blood
stream, albumin absorbs liquid from surrounding tissues, preventing blood
vessels from collapsing, a finding associated with shock. 1943 The
introduction by J.F. Loutit and Patrick L. Mollison of acid citrate dextrose
(ACD) solution, which reduces the volume of anticoagulant, permits
transfusions of greater volumes of blood and permits longer term storage. 1943 P. Beeson
publishes the classic description of transfusion-transmitted hepatitis. 1945 Coombs, Mourant,
and Race describe the use of antihuman globulin (later known as the “Coombs
Test”) to identify “incomplete” antibodies. 1947 The American
Association of Blood Banks (AABB) is formed to promote common goals among
blood banking practitioners and the blood donating public. 1949-1950 The US blood
collection system includes 1,500 hospital blood banks, 46 community blood
centers, and 31 American Red Cross regional blood centers. 1950 Audrey Smith
reports the use of glycerol cryoprotectant for freezing red blood cells. 1950 In one of the
single most influential technical developments in blood banking, Carl Walter
and W.P. Murphy, Jr., introduce the plastic bag for blood collection.
Replacing breakable glass bottles with durable plastic bags allows for the
evolution of a collection system capable of safe and easy preparation of
multiple blood components from a single unit of whole blood. Development of
the refrigerated centrifuge in 1953 further expedites blood component therapy.
1951 The AABB
Clearinghouse is established, providing a centralized system for exchanging
blood among blood banks. Today, the Clearinghouse is called the National
Blood Exchange. Mid-1950s In response to
the heightened demand created by open-heart surgery and advances in trauma
care patients, blood use enters its most explosive growth period. 1957 The AABB forms its
committee on Inspection and Accreditation to monitor the implementation of
standards for blood banking. 1958 The AABB publishes
its first edition of Standards for a Blood Transfusion Service (now titled
Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion Services). 1959 Max Perutz of
Cambridge University deciphers the molecular structure of hemoglobin; the
molecule that transports oxygen and gives red blood cells their color. 1960 The AABB begins
publication of TRANSFUSION, the first American journal wholly devoted to the
science of blood banking and transfusion technology. In this same year, A.
Solomon and J.L. Fahey
report the first therapeutic plasmapheresis procedure — a procedure
that separates whole blood into plasma and red blood cells. 1961 The role of
platelet concentrates in reducing mortality from hemorrhage in cancer
patients is recognized. 1962 The first
antihemophilic factor (AHF) concentrate to treat coagulation disorders in
hemophilia patients is developed through fractionation. 1962 In the US, there
were 4,400 hospital blood banks, 123 community blood centers and 55 American
Red Cross blood centers, collecting a total of five to six million units of
blood per year. 1964 Plasmapheresis is
introduced as a means of collecting plasma for fractionation. 1965 Judith G. Pool and
Angela E. Shannon report a method for producing Cryoprecipitate AHF for
treatment of hemophilia. 1967 Rh immune globulin
is commercially introduced to prevent Rh disease in the newborns of
Rh-negative women. 1969 S. Murphy and F.
Gardner demonstrate the feasibility of storing Platelets at room temperature,
revolutionizing platelet transfusion therapy. 1970 Blood banks move
toward an all-volunteer blood donor system. 1971 Hepatitis B surface
antigen (HBsAg) testing of donated blood begins. 1972 Apheresis is used to
extract one cellular component, returning the rest of the blood to the donor.
1979 A new anticoagulant
preservative, CPDA-1, extends the shelf life of whole blood and red blood
cells to 35 days, increasing the blood supply and facilitating resource
sharing among blood banks. Early 1980s with the
growth of component therapy, products for coagulation disorders, and plasma
exchange for the treatment of autoimmune disorders, hospital and community
blood banks enter the era of transfusion medicine, in which doctors trained
specifically in blood transfusion actively participate in patient care. 1981 First Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) case reported. 1983 Additive solutions
extend the shelf life of red blood cells to 42 days. 1984 Human
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) identified as cause of AIDS. 1985 The first
blood-screening test to detect HIV is licensed and quickly implemented by
blood banks to protect the blood supply. 1987 Two tests that
screen for indirect evidence of hepatitis are developed and implemented,
hepatitis B core antibody (anti-HBc) and the alanine aminotransferase test
(ALT). 1989
Human-T-Lymphotropic-Virus-I-antibody (anti-HTLV-I) testing of donated blood
begins. 1990 Introduction of
first specific test for hepatitis C, the major cause of “non-A, non-B”
hepatitis. 1992 Testing of donor
blood for HIV-1 and HIV-2 antibodies (anti-HIV-1 and anti-HIV-2) is
implemented. 1996 HIV p24 antigen
testing of donated blood begins. Although the test does not completely close
the HIV window, it shortens the window period. 1997 U.S. Government
issues two reports suggesting ways to improve blood safety, including
regulatory reform. National Blood Data Resource Center founded by AABB to
collect, analyze and distribute data on all aspects of blood banking and
transfusion medicine. 1998 HCV look back
campaign — a public health effort to alert anyone who may have been exposed
to the hepatitis C virus (HCV) through blood transfusions before July 1992 so
they can receive medical counseling and treatment if needed. 1999 Blood community begins implementation of Nucleic
Acid Amplification Testing (NAT) under the FDA’s Investigational New Drug
(IND) application process. NAT employs a testing technology that directly
detects the genetic materials of viruses like HCV and HIV.
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