Publications by authors named "Postoway N"

Background: The American Association of Blood Banks annually surveys institutional members on activities pertinent to blood collections, apheresis, and transfusions.

Study Design And Methods: Retrospective descriptive statistics and comparative statistical analyses including trend tests were performed on selected topics from the 1989, 1990, and 1991 Institutional Questionnaires. The data were compiled by institution type, namely, regional and community blood donor collection centers and hospital-based facilities.

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Approximately 2154 regional blood centers and hospital-based blood banks and transfusion services responded to the 1991 American Association of Blood Banks Institutional Membership Questionnaire that elicited data from 1990. Information from 2144 institutions was considered valid. Questionnaire topics were donor blood collections, hemapheresis, perioperative cell salvage, component usage, and transfusion-associated diseases.

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A 2-year-old male presented with upper respiratory tract infection symptoms, continuous high fever, extensive truncal rash with desquamation, lymphadenopathy, subconjunctival hemorrhage, and oral stomatitis. He was diagnosed with Kawasaki disease and did well on aspirin. Approximately 8 weeks after initial presentation he had evidence of severe immune hemolysis.

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Responses to the 1990 American Association of Blood Banks (AABB) Institutional Membership Questionnaire were submitted by 2126 regional blood centers, hospital-based blood banks, and transfusion facilities. Data from 2117 of these facilities were considered to be valid. The questionnaire included information on blood donor demographics, number of units collected, and collection procedures; services performed; usage of blood components; and transfusion-transmitted diseases reported during 1989.

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Fatal hemolytic anemia developed in a 52-year-old woman who was treated with a cephalosporin, ceftriaxone. The patient's red cells (RBCs) were coated with C3, but no RBC-bound IgG, IgA, or IgM was detected. Her serum contained an antibody that did not react with cephalosporin-coated RBCs but reacted strongly with RBCs in vitro when her serum was added to drug and RBCs.

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Sometimes it is necessary to crossmatch and transfuse ABO-incompatible platelets As IgG anti-A and anti-B sometimes react with platelets from group A or B donors, these reactions can confuse the interpretation of crossmatching, which is designed to detect HLA or platelet-specific antibodies. Methods previously described to overcome this problem have been complex. Neutr-ABR, which contains A and B blood group substances from porcine and equine sources, can be used to neutralize anti-A and/or anti-B in sera used to crossmatch ABO-incompatible platelets.

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A 71-year-old woman (Ped) received 3 units of red cells (RBCs), compatible by the indirect antiglobulin test but strongly (4+) incompatible by direct agglutination at 37 degrees C. The next day, her plasma hemoglobin was 1252 mg percent and the direct antiglobulin test (DAT) was weakly positive (IgG and C3). Less than 5 percent of the transfused cells could be detected 48 hours posttransfusion.

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Upon hospital admission a patient was found to have severe anemia and a strongly positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT). The patient was taking probenecid periodically for gout. An antibody was detected in the patient's serum that only reacted with red blood cells (RBCs) when probenecid was added.

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Red cells from 475 individuals (donors and patients) with a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT) (66% were 1/2+ to 1+, 19% were 1 1/2+ to 2+, and 15% were 2 1/2+ or greater) were examined for spontaneous agglutination following incubation in various media. Twenty-three percent of the samples showed spontaneous agglutination in commercial Rh control solutions, 6 percent in 30 percent albumin, 3 percent in 10 percent albumin, 2 percent in 6 percent albumin, and 1 percent in saline. Cells suspended in serum were more prone to spontaneous agglutination.

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The only IgG subclass antiserums standardized for use with red cells are those sold by the Netherlands Red Cross. Their recommended method is a sedimentation antiglobulin test (AGT) not generally used in the USA. Some years ago we tested the antiserums for sensitivity and specificity using the routine centrifugation AGT and found the methods comparable.

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Chan-Shu and Blair's findings that xylene produces a strongly reactive eluate from red blood cells have been confirmed and extended. Alloantibodies of 21 different blood group specificities and red blood cells sensitized in vivo, including ABO sensitization of babies' blood, were tested. The xylene method produced stronger reacting eluates than the modified ether method in 70 per cent of the tests.

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