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Enter the more stringent research to find out:
In the largest NIH-backed study, 15 hospitals will recruit 1,800 patients about to have heart surgery who agree to be randomly assigned to get blood more than 20 days old or less than 11 days old, and then track how they fare. (Patients who don't participate would get older blood anyway, per standard hospital policy.)
In Canada, researchers are enrolling 2,500 patients in critical-care units into a similar study that defines "fresh" as no older than a week. Separately, they're also studying the question in several hundred premature infants who need blood.
The Cleveland Clinic has enrolled about 1,000 heart-surgery patients and counting into another comparison, this one defining fresh as no older than two weeks.
At the same time, the NIH is funding eight additional projects to tease apart just what happens to stored blood that might trigger side effects. One leading theory is that stored blood gradually loses its ability to get oxygen to tissues, largely through loss of a blood vessel dilator called nitric oxide.
And Jy's team has found those microparticles play a role in blood clotting and inflammation, and that they start accumulating inside blood bags around day 10. Next up is a study of 500 heart surgery patients to test if washing two- or three-week-old blood in special machines that filter out the microparticles can make a difference.
However the debate turns out, it already may be spurring hospitals to be more conservative with blood.
"We actively seek to avoid transfusions whenever possible," says the Cleveland Clinic's Dr. Colleen Koch, through such steps as using devices that capture and recycle a patient's own blood during surgery.
[Associated
Press;
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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