scholarly journals Perancangan Alat Pendeteksi Golongan Darah dan Rhesus dengan Menggunakan Mikrokontroler Arduino Mega 2560

2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-51
Author(s):  
Hadi Syahputra ◽  
Sepsa Nur Rahman

The aim of the research is to design the tools used to detect and determine blood type. Blood and rhesus group detection can usually be done manually through a process of testing red blood cells with antisera (serum) to see if blood that has been given antisera (serum) occurs agglutination (agglutination) or non-agglutination (not clot). In this study, blood type and rhesus detection was designed electronically using ABO blood type and Rhesus system. It is designed using three pairs of light sensor, LED sensor as transmitter and Photodioda as receiver, comparator circuit and arduino mega 2560 microcontroller. Agglutination sensor or non-agglutination reaction of blood sample mixed with antisera. Next, it sends the voltage to be conditioned by the comparator circuit then sent to the microcontroller for processing and the blood type and rhesus readings will be displayed on the LCD screen.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathleen L. Arnolds ◽  
Nancy Moreno-Huizar ◽  
Maggie A. Stanislawski ◽  
Brent Palmer ◽  
Catherine Lozupone

Bacterial hemagglutination of red blood cells (RBCs) is mediated by interactions between bacterial cell components and RBC envelope glycans that vary across individuals by ABO blood type. ABO glycans are also expressed on intestinal epithelial cells and in most individuals secreted into the intestinal mucosa, indicating that hemagglutination by bacteria may be informative about bacteria-host interactions in the intestine. Bacteroides fragilis, a prominent member of the human gut microbiota, can hemagglutinate RBCs by an unknown mechanism. Using a novel technology for quantifying bacterial hemagglutination, genetic knockout strains of B. fragilis and blocking antiserums, we demonstrate that the capsular polysaccharides of B. fragilis, polysaccharide B (PSB), and PSC are both strong hemagglutinins. Furthermore, the capacity of B. fragilis to hemagglutinate was much stronger in individuals with Type O blood compared to Types A and B, an adaptation that could impact the capacity of B. fragilis to colonize and thrive in the host.Importance StatementThis study found that the human pathobiont, B. fragilis, hemagglutinates human red blood cells using specific capsular polysaccharides (PSB and PSC) which are known to be important for interacting with and influencing host immune responses. Because the factors found on red blood cells are also abundantly expressed on other tissues and in the mucous, the ability to hemagglutinate sheds light on interactions between bacteria and host throughout the body. Intriguingly, the strength of hemagglutination varied based on the ABO blood type of the host, a finding which could have implications for understanding if an individual’s blood type may influence interactions with B. fragilis and its potential as a pathogen versus a commensal.


1924 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph C. Aub ◽  
Paul Reznikoff ◽  
Dorothea E. Smith

The physiological changes following the reaction of lead upon red blood cells are numerous and show the marked effects of a change in the cell surface. In experiments here reported 0.01 to 0.05 mg. of lead acting upon 5 billion red cells caused such marked variations from normal as: 1. Partial loss of the normal stickiness of red corpuscles, which is demonstrated by their falling from a clean glass surface. 2. Loss of the agglutination reaction which normally follows mixture with serum of a different isoagglutinating group. 3. Decrease in volume even in isotonic solutions. 4. Loss of normal elasticity and, therefore, reduced changes in volume upon exposure to marked variations in osmotic tension. 5. Increase in resistance to large changes in external osmotic pressure because of this inelasticity, and therefore decreased hemolysis in hypotonic salt solution (Part 1). 6. Increase in the speed of disintegration in spite of this increased resistance to external osmotic pressure. "Leaded" cells break up more readily upon standing than do normal cells, and are easily fractured by rotation or shaking (Part 1). All these phenomena seem to be associated largely with surface changes in the corpuscles. Evidence is cited that there is no chemical reaction between lead and hemoglobin. The gas exchange is identical in normal and "leaded" cells. The function of the interior of the red cells, therefore, appears to be unaffected by lead. The effects of lead upon red blood cells are thus manifested by shrinkage, inability to expand, increased brittleness, and loss of the normal consistency which makes their surface sticky. After exposure to lead, red blood corpuscles are more like hard inelastic brittle rubber balls, than like the soft, elastic, resilient cells characteristic of normal blood.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 4252-4252 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerome Bailly ◽  
Veronique Sezanne ◽  
Yann Godfrin

Abstract Abstract 4252 L-asparaginase has been a mainstay of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treatment since decades and its efficacy has been demonstrated in a broad range of patient's profiles. However its use is hampered by frequent and/or significant toxicities. L-asparaginase loaded in homologous red blood cells (GRASPA®) is a new pharmaceutical formulation of the enzyme. This cell-based medicinal product allows a better safety profile and an improvement of the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the enzyme. As demonstrated by several teams performing different technologies of entrapment (Alpar-HO, 1985; Updike-SJ, 1985; Naqi-A 1988; Kravtzoff-R, 1996; Kwon-YM, 2010; Domenech-C, 2010), L-asparaginase remains active entrapped inside the red blood cell (RBC), while asparagine is constently and actively “pumped” through the membrane of the red cells thanks to N+ channel system. Thus, L-asparaginase loaded RBCs act as “cellular bioreactors”. Indeed, plasmatic asparagine diffuses through the RBC membrane to the intra cellular compartment where it is cleaved by the entrapped L-asparaginase. Thanks to the RBC membrane, the enzyme is protected from body reaction thus reducing the side effects. L-asparaginase loaded red blood cells is a cell-based medicinal product for personalized medicine. The physician prescribes the drug, then the hospital orders the product to the company. The patient weight, the ABO blood type and a valid irregular antibody screening (IAS) have to be joined with this order. The qualified person on the manufacturing site, orders immediately to a blood bank a leukocytes reduced packed RBC unit compatible with the patient. The product is manufactured under cGMP using a 3-hours automated process: (1) a washing step removes the preservative solution from the packed RBC, (2) L-asparaginase is mixed to the RBC washed suspension, (3) the mixture is dialyzed against a hypotonic solution and resealed, (4) a final washing step allows to purify the product, finally (5) the preservative solution is added. According to the prescribed dosage (IU/Kg), the volume of GRASPA® is adjusted in the final product PVC bag. Indeed, the product release specifications are constant and reproducible from batch to batch such as the corpuscular concentration of L-asparaginase (117±19, IU/ml), extracellular hemoglobin (0.11±0.03 g/dL), osmotic fragility (<3.5 g/L of NaCl), extracellular L-asparaginase (0.4±0.2 IU/ml ie <1% of the total activity). Based on these specifications, the qualified person releases the product and ships it (kept at 2–8°C) to the prescriber, meaning the delay between order and delivery is less than 2 days. Currently a 72h shelf-life for the final product is considered. The traceability system assures the linkage between the blood bank and patient's hospital. The manufacturing Key Peformance Indicators:GMP batches manufactured since 01/04/09:148Delivery Rate (since Apr. 2009)Clinical Batches delivered on time100 %Conformance rateGMP batches released (since Apr. 2009)94 %Conformance rate6 last months (since feb. 2011)100 % To date, 135 batches of GRAPSA® were administered to 71 patients enrolled in 3 clinical trials. In ALL patients, hypersensitive reaction, coagulation disorders, hepatic disorders are significantly reduced. The dose of 150IU/kg is currently used in a phase II/III pivotal trial in children and adults with ALL relapse. The dose of 100 IU/kg is optimal (efficacy/tolerance) in newly diagnosed patients over 55yo. Indeed this frail subpopulation of patients can difficultly receive current forms of L-asparaginase due to the known side effects. A phase I clinical trial in pancreatic carcinoma confirmed the good safety profile (also at 150IU/kg) of this form of L-asparaginase even in solid tumors, offering new perspectives in patients where asparagine synthetase in tumor cells is down. Disclosures: Bailly: ERYTECH Pharma: Employment. Sezanne:ERYTECH Pharma: Employment. Godfrin:ERYTECH Pharma: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


1984 ◽  
Vol 247 (1) ◽  
pp. R203-R207
Author(s):  
N. Alexander ◽  
S. Yoneda ◽  
N. D. Vlachakis ◽  
R. F. Maronde

We investigated the extent of catecholamine (CA) conjugation in plasma and accumulation inside red blood cells (RBCs) after forced immobilization of the rat. A control blood sample was obtained from undisturbed rats resting in home cages via an indwelling aortic catheter. Then rats were immobilized for 2 h, and blood samples were taken during stress at 15 min and 2 h and at 30 min poststress. Both sulfate and glucuronide conjugates were deconjugated by enzymatic hydrolysis and measured by radioenzymatic thin-layer chromatographic methods. In plasma of resting rats, the major conjugate of norepinephrine (NE) is sulfate and that of epinephrine (E) and dopamine (DA) is glucuronide; total conjugates in plasma are 53, 57, and 97% of total NE, E, and DA, respectively. During stress, sulfate conjugates of NE, E, and DA increased significantly along with free NE, E, and DA. DA glucuronide unexpectedly declined at 2 h of stress and 30 min poststress. Concentrations of free CAs rose in RBCs during stress, as did NE sulfate, the only conjugate present in RBC lysate. We conclude that both CA conjugation and RBC accumulation are enhanced when large amounts of free CA enter the circulation as a result of immobilization stress and that the relative importance of these inactivation pathways is different for the three CAs.


1950 ◽  
Vol 28e (4) ◽  
pp. 152-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth W. McKerns ◽  
Orville F. Denstedt

An hypothesis is presented to account for the invariable persistence of unagglutinated red blood cells in agglutinated samples even when potent isoagglutinating serum is used. It is postulated that the cells which remain free represent the few which become completely saturated with the agglutinin during the sensitization phase of the reaction. These cells, which amount to only a fraction of a per cent of the total originally present in the sample, are incapable of reacting with one another but can undergo agglutination with fresh cells of the same blood type thus indicating that they are morphologically normal. Evidence is presented in support of the hypothesis. The free-cell count is reproducible provided the agglutinating serum is potent and the conditions of the experiment are standardized. The influence of various factors on the free-cell count, and the usefulness of the count for following changes in the avidity of isoagglutinating serum with time, are discussed.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 173-173
Author(s):  
Fumihiko Kimura ◽  
Ken Sato ◽  
Shinichi Kobayashi ◽  
Takashi Ikeda ◽  
Hiroki Torikai ◽  
...  

Abstract ABO incompatibility between donor and recipient is not a barrier for successful allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, but conflicting data still exist concerning its influence on transplant outcome, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), relapse, and survival. We retrospectively analyzed the data of patients who underwent UR-BMT through the Japan Marrow Donor Program between January 1993 and September 2005, with complete data on ABO-blood group compatibility, age, and gender in donors and recipients. A total of 4,970 patients were transplanted with marrow from ABO-matched (M; n=2,513, 50.6%), major incompatible (MA; n=1,254, 25.2%), minor incompatible (MI; n=1,081, 21.8%), and bidirectional incompatible donors (IA; n=122, 2.5%), and were followed up over a median period of 325 days. Among these four groups, excluding age, there was no significant difference in the gender of patients and donors, number of transplantations, conditioning regimen, GVHD prophylaxis, and performance status before transplantation by the likelihood ratio test. The 5-year overall survival of any ABO-incompatible group was significantly lower compared to an identical group (Wilcoxon test, p<0.0001); the estimates for each group were 50.0% (M), 44.7% (MA), 46.7% (MI), and 41.3% (IA). Even in HLA-matched transplantation (n=2,608), a similar difference in overall survival was observed among the four groups (p=0.0124). In ABO-mismatched transplantation, the processing of bone marrow is necessary to prevent hemolysis of donor or recipient red blood cells as a result of the infusion of ABO-incompatible red blood cells or plasma contained within it. This procedure may reduce the number of hematopoietic stem cells. In fact, the mean number of total infused cells in each group was 3.10 (M), 1.52 (MA), 2.87 (MI), and 1.33 (IA) x108 per patient body weight (kg), with a significant difference in 4,210 patients in which data on the infused cell number were available (M; n=2,310, MA; n=996, MI; n=802, IA; n=102). To examine whether the difference in overall survival depended on the transplanted cell number, we used time-dependent Cox proportional hazards modeling to compare identical and major incompatible groups in terms of overall survival. Whereas the disease (standard and high-risk malignant disease, and benign disease; p=0.0000), patient age (p=0.0000), and ABO compatibility (p=0.0311) were elucidated to be significant risk factors, the number of infused cells was not (p=0.0603). Engraftment of red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets were significantly delayed in major ABO mismatch in comparison with ABO identity (p<0.0001). Univariate analysis revealed a small but significant difference in the rate of grade III and IV GVHD among the four groups (p=0.0204). Patients with major and minor ABO incompatibility had a higher incidence of severe GVHD compared to ABO identity (21.9%, 20.4% vs 16.2%). There was no significant difference in GVHD of the skin and gut, but major and minor mismatch developed a higher incidence of moderate to severe hepatic GVHD compared to ABO match (p<0.0001, p=0.0010, respectively). ABO incompatibility had no significant effect on relapse, but the incidence of rejection was significantly higher with ABO-incompatible transplantation (p=0.0219).


Author(s):  
HUMMAM GHASSAN GHIFARI ◽  
DENNY DARLIS ◽  
ARIS HARTAMAN

ABSTRAKPendeteksian golongan darah dilakukan untuk mengetahui golongan darah yang dimiliki. Hingga saat ini pendeteksian golongan darah masih dilakukan oleh petugas analis kesehatan menggunakan kemampuan mata manusia. Pada penelitian ini dilakukan perancangan alat pendeteksi golongan darah menggunakan ESP32-CAM. Alat ini menggunakan kamera OV2640 untuk menangkap citra, yang diproses menggunakan Tensorflow Object Detection API sebagai framework untuk melatih serta mengolah citra darah. Model latih akan digunakan pada kondisi pendeteksian langsung dan ditampilkan dalam bentuk jendela program golongan darah beserta tingkat akurasinya. Dalam penelitian ini pengujian dilakukan menggunakan 20 dataset dengan jarak pengukuran antara ESP32-CAM dengan citra golongan darah yaitu sejauh 20 cm. Hasil yang didapat selama pengujian mayoritas golongan darah yang dapat terdeteksi adalah golongan darah AB.Kata kunci: ESP32-CAM, Tensorflow, Python, Golongan Darah, Pengolahan Citra ABSTRACTBlood group detection is performed to determine the blood group. Currently, in detecting blood type, it still relies on the ability of the human eyeThis paper presents a human blood group detection device using ESP32-CAM. This tool uses ESP32-CAM to capture images, and the Tensorflow Object Detection API as a framework used to train and process an image. The way this tool works is that the ESP32-CAM will capture an image of the blood sample and then send it via the IP address. Through the IP Address, the python program will access the image, then the image will be processed based on a model that has been previously trained. The results of this processing will be displayed in the form of a window program along with the blood type and level of accuracy. In this study, testing was carried out based on the number of image samples, the number of datasets, and the measurement distance. The ideal measurement distance between the ESP32-CAM and the blood group image is 20 cm long. The results obtained during the testing of the majority of blood groups that can be detected are AB blood group.Keywords: ESP32-CAM, Tensorflow, Python, Blood Type, Image Processing


2021 ◽  
Vol 129 (7) ◽  
pp. 961
Author(s):  
С.Ю. Никитин ◽  
В.Д. Устинов ◽  
Е.Г. Цыбров ◽  
М.С. Лебедева

An analytical model of laser beam scattering on an inhomogeneous ensemble of red blood cells is constructed. The model takes into account the difference in red blood cells in size, shape, and orientation in space. The connection of the experimentally measured parameter – the visibility of the diffraction pattern – with the characteristic that has the meaning of a measure of the heterogeneity of the blood sample in terms of the size and shape of red blood cells is established. The monotonicity property of this dependence is shown, which makes it possible to estimate the spread of red blood cells by size and shape based on the measurement of the visibility of the diffraction pattern.


1949 ◽  
Vol 27e (3) ◽  
pp. 164-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth W. McKerns ◽  
Orville F. Denstedt

By sulphuration of red blood cells with hydrogen sulphide, up to 75% of the haemoglobin can be converted to sulphaemoglobin without seriously impairing the osmotic stability or the agglutinability of the cells with various antisera with exception of anti-Rh. Unlike the A, B, M, and N agglutinogens, the Rh factor is labile to sulphuration and numerous other treatments. Sulphurated cells, by their size and color, can be distinguished from normal cells under the microscope. This feature has been used to confirm Marrack's hypothesis that the aggregation phase of the agglutination reaction is specific.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhijing Liu ◽  
Shi-Jiang Lu ◽  
Yan Lu ◽  
Xiaohua Tan ◽  
Xiaowei Zhang ◽  
...  

Shortage of red blood cells (RBCs, erythrocytes) can have potentially life-threatening consequences for rare or unusual blood type patients with massive blood loss resulting from various conditions. Erythrocytes have been derived from human pluripotent stem cells (PSCs), but the risk of potential tumorigenicity cannot be ignored, and a majority of these cells produced from PSCs express embryonicε- and fetalγ-globins with little or no adultβ-globin and remain nucleated. Here we report a method to generate erythrocytes from human hair follicle mesenchymal stem cells (hHFMSCs) by enforcing OCT4 gene expression and cytokine stimulation. Cells generated from hHFMSCs expressed mainly the adultβ-globin chain with minimum level of the fetalγ-globin chain. Furthermore, these cells also underwent multiple maturation events and formed enucleated erythrocytes with a biconcave disc shape. Gene expression analyses showed that OCT4 regulated the expression of genes associated with both pluripotency and erythroid development during hHFMSC transdifferentiation toward erythroid cells. These findings show that mature erythrocytes can be generated from adult somatic cells, which may serve as an alternative source of RBCs for potential autologous transfusion.


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