Due to a shortage of platelets at Childrens Hospital, we encourage you to donate platelets as frequently as possible for Justine. Justine suffered another nose bleed the other day which continued for about 24 hours. The doctors and nurses used gel packing as an alternative to slow down the bleeding until they were able to get donated platelets. As you can see, platelets are a vital part for Justine’s recovery.
Donating Platelets
Patients suffering from leukemia, aplastic anemia or a bone marrow disease require special blood products, such as platelets or white blood cells.
In an apheresis procedure, your blood is separated to extract only the needed component. Because of the special process involved, the blood donation procedure takes approximately two hours.
What are Platelets?
Platelets are blood cells that help control bleeding. When a blood vessel is damaged, platelets collect at the site of the injury and temporarily repair the tear. Platelets then activate substances in plasma which form a clot and allow the wound to heal.
Who Needs Platelets?
Patients receiving chemotherapy and/or radiation treatment and those who are having a Bone Marrow Transplant, have especially low platelet counts and can bleed very easily. Platelet donations are in great demand by children undergoing these processes.
Because platelets can be stored for only five days, the need for platelet donations is vast and continuous.
What is Apheresis?
Apheresis (ay-fur-ee-sis) is a special kind of blood donation that allows a donor to give specific blood components, such as platelets. During the apheresis procedure, all but the needed blood component are returned to the donor.
Why is Blood Separated?
Different patients need different types of blood components, depending on their illness or injury. After you donate whole blood, the unit is separated into platelets, red cells and plasma in our laboratory. Only two tablespoons of platelets are collected from a whole blood donation. Six whole blood donations must be separated and pooled to provide a single platelet transfusion. However, one apheresis donation provides enough platelets for one complete transfusion — that’s six times the amount collected from a whole blood donation.
How Do Individuals Donate Platelets?
Because platelet donation involves separating cells from the blood, the collection procedure takes approximately two hours. The blood will flow from one arm to the collection instrument. There, the platelets will be removed from the blood and returned to the donor via the other arm (or the same arm). The process takes place in a sterile environment.
Who Needs Platelets?
Many lifesaving medical treatments require platelet transfusions. Cancer patients, those receiving organ or bone marrow transplants, victims of traumatic injuries, and patients undergoing open heart surgery require platelet transfusions to survive.
Who Can be an Apheresis Donor?
If you meet the requirements for donating blood, you probably can give platelets. Apheresis donors must:
Does Blood Type Matter?
Since there are no red blood cells in a platelet product, we are not limited to using the same donor blood types as with red cells.
Are Apheresis Donations Safe?
Yes. Each donation is closely supervised throughout the procedure by trained staff. A small percentage of your platelets are collected, so there is no risk of bleeding problems. Your body will replace the donated platelets within 72 hours. The donation equipment (needle, tubing, collection bags) are sterile and discarded after every donation, making it virtually impossible to contract a disease from the process.
How Does the Procedure Work?
During an apheresis donation, blood is drawn from your arm into an automated cell separator. Inside a sterile kit within the machine, your blood is spun and platelets are removed. Your remaining blood components are then returned through your arm.
How Long Does it Take?
Depending on your weight and height, the apheresis donation process will take approximately 70 minutes to two hours.
Make an Appointment Today!
Due to the time constraints for platelet donations, we require platelet donors to schedule their appointments. Please contact Raul Gonzalez at 323-361-2441 to make an appointment.
(Information on this page compiled from Childrens Hospital Los Angeles and Puget Sound Blood Center.)
Justine Kicks Cancer honors a teenage soccer star, honor student, and warrior against all things leukemia. The site was established to keep family and friends updated about Justine's fight against the disease, as well as provide information about how you can support events and organizations devoted to raising money for cancer research.
9 Responses to PLATELET DONATIONS — Shortage Creates Ongoing Need
Jane Alba
April 21st, 2009 at 9:23 am
I’m donating every 2 weeks!! They give you free brownies =)
Jamie Kessinger
April 21st, 2009 at 10:35 am
I am making an apt. to Donate Platelets on May 2nd. It will be my first time! Just waiting to hear back from Raul so I can set up my apt.
Rainel Caranto
April 21st, 2009 at 4:22 pm
Jane and Jamie,
Thank you for all your support. She will surely need plenty of platelets.
Jane Alba
April 21st, 2009 at 4:45 pm
If the number listed above doesn’t work use this to contact Raul Gonzalez – 323 361-2380
Arnold Gatilao
April 22nd, 2009 at 4:14 pm
Christel and I are donating on Friday, May 1 at 2:30pm.
Leslie Alpert
April 23rd, 2009 at 8:44 pm
Daniel, Jeff and I are scheduled for May 2!
Claudia Pantoja
May 3rd, 2009 at 12:05 pm
Can I give blood every two months and platelets every two weeks, is this possible?
After giving platelets is there any time that the person needs to rest?
Rainel Caranto
May 6th, 2009 at 12:12 pm
Yes, you can give blood every two months and give platelets every two weeks. For more information about blood donations, you can always call 323-361-2441. This is the contact number for Childrens Hospital Blood Donor Department.
Pubounusuyavw
December 18th, 2009 at 1:25 pm
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