EARLY ATTEMPTS
First historical
attempt at blood transfusion was carried out in 1492 on Pope Innocent VIII.
Blood of three boys was infused into the dying pontiff through the mouth. The boys were 10 years old and had been promised
payment in return for the donation.
However, not only did the Pope die, but so did the three children.
The first fully
documented human blood transfusion was administered by Dr. Jean-Baptisle Denys,
personal physician to King Louis XIV of France in 1667. He transfused
blood of a sheep into a 15 year old boy who the survived the transfusion. Transfusions
in several patients however proved fatal.
Dr. Deny’s
experiments with animal blood provoked heated controversy in France and the
rest of Europe. In 1670 the procedure was banned and blood transfusion fell
into obscurity for the next 150 years.
FIRST SUCCESSFUL TRANSFUSION
§ In 1665, Christian Zagado was able to demonstrate that you
could revive a dog that had been exanguinated by
transfusion of blood from another dog.
§ Lower performed the first
blood transfusion between animals.
§ However Deny’s performed the first transfusion between humans and
claimed credit for the technique
§ Lower performed the first human transfusion in Britain using sheep’s
blood in a patient afflicted by insanity. Sheep’s blood was used because
speculation about the value of blood exchange between species. It had been
suggested that blood from a gentle lamb might quiet the tempestuous spirit of
an agitated person and that the shy might be made outgoing by blood from more
sociable creatures.
1818 James Blundell a British Obstetrician performed the first
successful
bloodtransfusion of human blood for the treatment of postpartum
Haemorrhage (maternal
bleeding after childbirth)
1840
First
successful whole blood transfusion to treat Haemophilla – an
inherited bleeding disorder.
1901
Karl
Landsteiner an Austrian Scientist discovered human blood
groups. Karl Landsteiner observed that mixing of blood from two
individuals can lead to blood clumping or agglutination. The clumped red cells
can crack and cause toxic reactions which can have fatal consequences. Karl Landsteiner’s work made it possible to
determine blood groups i.e A, B, AB, O and thus paved the way for blood
transfusions to be carried out safely. For this discovery he was awarded the Nobel
prize in medicine in 1930.
1914 First non-direct
transfusion performed by Belgian Doctor Albert Hustn
by using sodium citrate as an anticoagulant.
1916 First blood transfusion using blood
that had been stored and cooled.
First transfusions had to be made directly from donor to receiver
before coagulation.
World War I First blood bank established
in France by U.S Army officer Osward
Hope Robertson.
1925
First academic institution
devoted to the science of Blood transfusion in Moscow by Alexander Bogdanov.
Bogdanovu was motivated by a search for eternal youth. He received eleven
transfusions of whole blood and remarked on the improvement of his eyesight,
suspension of balding and other positive symptoms after the transfusion. He
tragically died after receiving blood from a student suffering from malaria and
tuberculosis. He had been entrusted with the task of studying Lenin’s brain
with a view toward resuscitating the deceased leader.
1930 National system of blood banks
set up in the Soviet Union.
1937 First
Hospital Blood Bank in the USA established at Cook
County Hospital in Chicago by Bernard Fantus
who originated the term “Blood Bank”.
Late 1930s Component separation into
plasma and red cells developed by Dr.
Early 1940s Charles R. Drew.
1939-1940
Rhesus Blood group system
discovered by Karl Landsteiner, Alex Weiner, Phillip Levine and R.E Stetson.
1943 Introduction of acid-citrate
Dextrose (ACD) solution allowed
Transfusion of greater volumes of blood and allowed longer-term
storage. Work done by J. F Loutit and Patrick L. Mollison.
1950 Introduction of plastic bag
collection system replacing the breakable
glass bottles allowed the evolution of a collection system capable
of safe and easy preparation of multiple blood components from a single unit of
whole blood.
1979 Introduction of an anticoagulant
preservative CPDA-1 further extended
the shelf life of stored blood, increased the blood supply and
facilitated resource sharing among blood banks.
By Dr.Gabriel Muyinda
Executive Director - Zambia National Blood Transfusion Service
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