Banked Blood May Not Be As Effective As Hoped
URSpider alerts us to two separate research reports published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pointing to the rapid breakdown of nitric oxide in donated blood as a reason why such blood loses its ability to transfer oxygen, and is sometime implicated in problems such as strokes and heart attacks. Nitric oxide depletion is significant after 3 hours of storage; yet current guidelines allow for storing donated blood for up to 42 days. The article notes: "Several of the researchers, including Stamler, have consulting and/or equity relationships with Nitrox/N30, a company developing nitric oxide based therapies."
Let me weigh up the situation here:
Die due to running out of blood.
Survive because someone donated blood.
I realise that the length of time is a factor and you want the freshest possible, but beggars can't be choosers.
liqbase
Perhaps the blood is not as efficient as it could be in transferring oxygen, but I would think that it is still pretty damn useful.
1. This is a study with participants highly linked to a firm that makes money off of adding NO to blood products. They have financial and other incentives to find a "lack" of NO in stored blood.
2. As with any study, an independent study should be done to see if this is verifiable and repeatable. This should be done by a lab that is not financially or otherwise linked to the NO additive firm aforementioned.
3. The other thing to look at is method of storage, temperature, and other conditions - did they conform to current standards, did they vary these elements, and was this independently audited?
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
I agree with the beginning of your post, but not the conclusion. Yes, we've been messing with blood transfusions for centuries, but in that time we've learned about blood types (thus explaining the mysterious deaths of a large portion of those receiving transfusions), learned to test for diseases, store and maintain blood supplies, and have the donation down to a system where I can do it at lunch and go back to work. Now, we may even be able to do a hybrid of synthetic/natural blood that's more effective than the stored blood would be otherwise; that's quite a feat.
Your concluding that scientists are just pissing in the wind is like concluding that car manufacturers are just pissing in the wind because of the recent invention of heated seats.