A Device for Balancing Buckets Used for Donor Blood Centrifugation

2004 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-49
Author(s):  
S. A. Golosova ◽  
A. I. Samburskii ◽  
E. B. Zhiburt
Author(s):  
Tarik Zahouani ◽  
Katherine Pultorak ◽  
Fulden Pay ◽  
Alexandre E. Medina ◽  
Dina E. El-Metwally

1976 ◽  
Vol 231 (3) ◽  
pp. 832-836
Author(s):  
HH Bengele ◽  
S Solomon

Male rats from reduced (fast-growing) litters between 14 and 50 days of age were studied. Standard renal clearnce techniques were employed. After a 60-min control period, the animals were infused (2.3% body wt) with heparinized donor blood obtained from lillermates of the same age. Renal function was followed for an additional 60 min. The efficiency of the diuretic response, the percent infused volume excreted above control levels, and the sodium efficiency, the percent infused Na excreted, were calculated. Results indicate that both efficiencies develop in a discontinuous pattern and that they are comparable. This pattern of development, as well as the magnitude of the mature response, is comparable to that previously reported for rats from intact (normally growing) litters. The onset and attainment of the mature response is, however, shifted in time, such that reduced-litter animals achieve the mature response 10-15 days earlier than intact-litter rats. Results exclude chronological age or body weight alone as principal determinant of the mature response and suggest that some function of growth rate is responsible for the maturation of this regulatory function.


Author(s):  
Amelia E. Gavulic ◽  
Danielle Dougherty ◽  
Shih-Hon Li ◽  
Alissa R. Carver ◽  
Jennifer R. Bermick ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santiago Benites de Pádua ◽  
Márcia Mayumi Ishikawa ◽  
Fabiana Satake ◽  
Gabriela Tomas Jerônimo ◽  
Fabiana Pilarski

The blood infection by Trypanosoma sp. in tuvira (Gymnotus aff. inaequilabiatus) from the Pantanal wetland was reported in this study. Ten fish from the Paraguay River in the Pantanal were evaluated for the presence of hemoflagellates. Trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma sp. were observed in blood smears from three fish (30% prevalence) and some forms were seen to be undergoing division. Using the diagnostic methods of fresh examination and blood centrifugation in hematocrit capillary tubes, the prevalence rate was 80%. This is the first report of Trypanosoma sp. in tuvira in Brazil.


1974 ◽  
Vol 267 (3) ◽  
pp. 171-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
JOHN R. SENIOR ◽  
ALTON I. SUTNICK ◽  
EUGENE GOESER ◽  
W. THOMAS LONDON ◽  
MIRIAM B. DAHLKE ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Peter Inyimai ◽  
Mosses Ocan ◽  
Benjamin Wabwire ◽  
Peter Olupot-Olupot

Background. There is a paucity of data on asymptomatic carriage of Plasmodium parasite among adult population in Eastern Uganda, an area of perennial high transmission of malaria. In this study, we estimated the prevalence of Plasmodium parasites in donor blood units at Mbale Regional Blood Bank (Mbale RBB), a satellite centre of the Uganda Blood Transfusion Service (UBTS). Method. This was a cross-sectional descriptive study in which 380 screened donor blood units were examined for the presence of Plasmodium parasites. A systematic random sampling technique using the interval of 7 was used in selecting the screened blood units for testing. Two experienced malaria slide microscopists (MC1 and MC2) independently examined each thick and thin blood slide under high power magnification of X400 and then X1000 as stated on the study standard operation procedure (SOP). Each slide was examined for 100 oil immersion fields before the examiner declared them negative for Plasmodium parasites. The results by each microscopist’s examination were tallied separately, and finally, the two tallies were compared. The third independent microscopist (MC3) was blinded to the results from MC1 and MC2, but whose role was to perform quality control on the slides randomly sampled and read 38 (10%) of all the slides and was available to examine any slides with inconsistent findings by MC1 or MC2. Results. All the microscopists were unanimous in all the slide readings. Five of the thick smears (1.3%) confirmed the presence of Plasmodium parasites among donor blood units. Of these, 4/5 were from male donors. Plasmodium falciparum was identified in 4 positive samples, while Plasmodium malariae was identified in one of the donor units. Conclusion. The 1.3% prevalence of Plasmodium malaria parasites in screened donor blood units represents risk of malaria blood transfusion transmitted infection and a pool of community transmittable malaria infections, respectively.


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