The Man With the Golden Blood
First time accepted submitter Torontoman points out this story of a man with one of the rarest blood types in the world. Forty years ago, when ten-year-old Thomas went into the University Hospital of Geneva with a routine childhood infection, his blood test revealed something very curious: he appeared to be missing an entire blood group system. There are 35 blood group systems, organized according to the genes that carry the information to produce the antigens within each system. The majority of the 342 blood group antigens belong to one of these systems. The Rh system (formerly known as ‘Rhesus’) is the largest, containing 61 antigens. The most important of these Rh antigens, the D antigen, is quite often missing in Caucasians, of whom around 15 per cent are Rh D negative (more commonly, though inaccurately, known as Rh-negative blood). But Thomas seemed to be lacking all the Rh antigens. If this suspicion proved correct, it would make his blood type Rhnull – one of the rarest in the world, and a phenomenal discovery for the hospital hematologists.
he will become a frequent contributor one day.
Summary fail.
Thinking of actual gold-colored blood, I was expecting a human/arachnid hybrid. A spider-man, if you will.
You get your own blood drive:
http://www.archonstl.org/31/he...
'member him? he married Alexandria Bea Positive.
If big-pharma uses his blood to make a product does he get a piece of the action?
Does he have a say in how it is used?
A: Krylon Technicolor type A
Mike Shinoda is the only known carrier.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
I do find this interesting and would welcome links suitable for the lay person on the subject. But I'm not sure if these blood types are rare or just not something that is usually looked at, and I'm at a loss to understand why and how it was checked and found in this case. I'm used to the four major groupings (A, B, AB (both A and B) and O (neither A or B)) and the main RH factor that determines RH+ or RH-. But I seldom see any mention of special typing beyond this and I don't know if all blood is typed for these special extra factors and then that information is just withheld form patients or if the majority of tests are just for these major 8 categories. I suspect the latter. But that brings up the question of when and why blood is ever tested for all of these other "minor" typings, and just how minor are they. Occasionally we hear about someone who needs extremely rare blood, but the medical world seems to be content to classify me as B+. What does one do to rate these extra special tests?
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
He first donated as an 18-year-old in the army
As a 18-year-old Greek conscript marine i did the "1 day honorable leave donation", even if just the "1 hour away from the barracks" was good enough for me - 20 years later i proudly am in the process of getting a new donors card because the old is full with the records of my donations.
Donate blood!
Copyright?
Perl Programmer for hire
I donate blood all the time, it's just not mine. They don't ask questions about where it comes from. Anymore.
Let's dissect him.
Worst Bond film ever.
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
And when people ask, you can describe your blood type as "T-Negative."
Gov Christie find out he will set-up a Rh-null Travel Ban at Newark International to imprison all travelers from Europe.
All those researchers constantly after your blood. Yeesh *shudder*
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
I thought the photos (I'm assuming from a large blood center's processing facility) were pretty neat. My local blood bank doesn't have anything nearly so cool. (I donate platelets about 20 times a year, so I got one of the tech's I'm friendly with to give me a tour of the back room.)
wonder if a look back over historic records will find more of these that were dismissed as 'testing error' or 'typo'?
"Consensus" in science is _always_ a political construct.
has appropriate procedures for dealing with this nullbloodtype exception. Just think of the buffer overflow attacks
Sounds like a James Bond villain. I don't expect you to talk, Mr. Bond, I expect you to BLEED!
Words, words, words
This is fascinating news for people like me who have been on the "EAT RIGHT 4 YOUR BLOOD TYPE DIET", by Dr D'Adamo. Ive been on the diet for 16 years :)