Scientists Create Artificial Blood 225
simm1701 wrote us with a BBC article link on a sort of artificial blood substitute being developed by an English university. The substance is light, can survive at room temperature, and keeps longer than real blood, allowing it to be used as a stand-in in emergency situations. "The new blood is made up of plastic molecules that have an iron atom at their core, like haemoglobin, that can carry oxygen through the body. The scientists said the artificial blood could be cheap to produce and they were looking for extra funding to develop a final prototype that would be suitable for biological testing ... A sample of the artificial blood prototype will be on display at the Science Museum in London from 22 May as part of an exhibition about the history of plastics."
Thank god! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Thank god! (Score:5, Funny)
New, in Italian, Mexican and Indian flavors.
Re:Thank god! (Score:5, Funny)
All day and all of the night (Score:3, Funny)
Nah, I'll stick with natural. This artificial stuff tastes too much like plastic
If this takes off, all the vampires'll be going around trying to figure out which humans are "organic" and which have the plastic stuff in their blood. You can't tell just by looking. Hey!..... I know a song about that.
# A man lives at the corner of the street,
And his neighbors think he's helpful and he's sweet,
'Cause he never swears and he always shakes you by the hand,
But no one knows he really is a plastic man. #
# He's got plastic heart, plastic blood and veins
(Yeah, he's plastic man)
He's got p
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Can I get it in green? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Can I get it in green? (Score:5, Funny)
Can I get it in cows? (Score:5, Funny)
Although it would give a whole new meaning to "clotted cream".
Re:Can I get it in cows? (Score:5, Funny)
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ttyl
Farrell
lasting effects? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:lasting effects? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd be more concerned with where they go after the emergency is over. The spleen collects dead red blood cells... do the artifical ones "die"? What happens to the plastic then?
IANAD, so, can any harm happen with an excess of red blood cells? Maybe this will lead to a future where some could supercharge their blood to maximize oxygen carrying ability.
Re:lasting effects? (Score:5, Informative)
It's called "blood doping [wikipedia.org]" and people already do it.
As for the rest of your question, IANAD either, and I'm curious about that too.
Re:lasting effects? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes. The condition is called polycythemia, and most of the incidents involve the increased viscosity of blood leading to thrombus formation-- possibly causing heart attacks and strokes.
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Also, if you are on this artificial asteroid, you can get married to the priestess and NOT change your clothes once you've resigned to the fact that you'll spend the rest of your life on said asteroid.
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NAD either, but if you consider common blood failure modes that would probably be in the realms of blood clots (plastic clots?), ie, too thick blood causing blockage, or blood not clotting (plastic blood doesnt result in breakage of blood cells at point of injury, and thus messes with triggers for clotting) and you get bleeding (which may or may not be a problem if you have an unlimited supply of plastic blood).
I can certainly see the use, but the long
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It's interesting to learn that they made these artificial oxygen carriers especially since blood is not simple to store and a lot of doctors are already starting to look at alternatives (saline solutions is a simple one) to add 'bloo
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I'd be more concerned with where they go after the emergency is over. The spleen collects dead red blood cells... do the artifical ones "die"? that happens to the plastic then?
That's the point of the research, I guess. The obvious advantage is that since the stuff is totally synthetic, it is guaranteed to be sterile, hence the long shelf life. But I wonder along with you about them calling the stuff 'plastic'.
Since the functions of a red blood cell (apart from carrying oxygen) include:
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Layne
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Sign me up!
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Clots and scabs are made from platelets [wikipedia.org]. I don't think that artificial red blood cells [wikipedia.org] would affect the ability to clot.
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They're not going to give you a shot of blood and say "See you back in 2 weeks!"
You're going to be messed up and need blood yesterday to get this. You're going to be in a controlled environment and will probably have some IV type of thing in you to pull out the plastic cells once your body is able to produce it's own.
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But that would be very useful for ninjas
Re:lasting effects? (Score:5, Funny)
Dissolving Sutures (Score:2)
Re:lasting effects? (Score:5, Funny)
The story had just come up over the SlashWire, and unlike the usually dismissive drivel, this one caught his eye. Artificial blood. Something wasn't right here. They were going to investigate artificial blood? He thought back to his high school biology and that time he skinned his knee. Also that one program he saw on Nova. Blood...body...plastic...NO GOOD! My God, what if the body totally flipped out and went all attack mode on the blood! An emergency situation would be totally ruined!
He had to act.
Quickly he hit the reply button. The world needed to know before the scientists made an irreversible mistake. As fast as his fingers could go, he tapped out his response and hit sumbit. Now all he could do was wait. The story was fresh, so he might have caught it in time.
Yes! There it was. The Slashmods had taken notice. A reply. A mod point. But not good enough...not yet. Minutes ticked by, the story was already the second down. Would he make it in time?
Waiting...waiting...
YES! +5 moderation! He sighed. His point was made, and now the world knew. The scientists would roll back their plans and head back to the drawing board.
Turn-X would sleep well tonight.
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I don't like being stupid.
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There's a slashdot uniform? Where do I get one? What is it, some kind of green jumpsuit with special insignia on it?
What group is it? (Score:5, Interesting)
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But you may be interested in some new research [sciencedaily.com] that looks to be able to remove the antigens from regular blood, thus converting all blood types to type O.
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Darn it! Just when I was beginning to feel important! If they can convert any blood type to O, then what do they need me for?
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In reading a related wikipedia page, I see that the blood conversion technique does not remove the Rh D antigen. So the synthetic blood may have one up on it in this regard.
that explains the vampires last night (Score:5, Funny)
threw 'em a floppy and shut the window.
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Use #462 for AOL disks: Vampire Decoy
Won't be a big hit. (Score:2, Funny)
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Artificail Blood is old news (Score:5, Informative)
Not in this fashion. (Score:2)
Do "I" care either way? Nope. I have a rare blood type and would accept anything.
But people with some religions do. Hindu's would not accept the bovine derived blood, and the Jehovia's witnesses wouldn't accept any form of blood derived from another's blood.
If the JW accept this product, then fewer of them will die in surgery, or have their children die. Fewer
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Hmm (Score:2, Informative)
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However this appears to be an artificial source of red cells, and would be an even greater boon to medical science (and in the short term, a huge help for JW's undergoing medical treatment) since it eliminates many of the problems (physical problems for
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true (Score:2)
uhh, but now you are introducing typing again (Score:2)
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Old News.. (Score:2, Interesting)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PolyHeme [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_substitutes [wikipedia.org]
There was a big stink a while back about FDA trials without consent. The problem is if your in shock and being serviced by first responders you don't really have time to fill out a consent form and the EMT's can't carry real blood with them so synthetic blood is the only option.
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Not Exactly New (Score:2, Informative)
Pamala Anderson (Score:2)
No more need for Bart... (Score:2)
Blood, but not plasma (Score:2)
The Singularity is Near.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Among other things he talked about blood substitutes, describing how the day is near when you'll be able to take a single deep breath and sit on the bottom of your pool for 15+ minutes, so efficient will be your (artificially enhanced) uptake of oxygen.
He gave a great speech. I recommend his book, "The Singularity is Near."
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better link (Score:2)
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,
I heard... (Score:2)
Aspertame (Score:4, Funny)
Fake Blood (Score:2, Funny)
Why is this news? (Score:2, Insightful)
I wonder why it's colored red, too. Is it just to make people feel better, or did all the iron atoms start to rust...
Are you so sure they haven't started testing? (Score:2)
I'm not so sure this is very different than PolyHeme [wikipedia.org] which is artifical blood made with polymerized human haemoglobin extracted from expired donated blood.
Eventually PolyHeme was tested on humans using an opt-out technique (if you didn't have a special bracelet on your wrist, they could use PolyHeme instead of real blood in trama situations where you couldn't object to being a test subject). As you might imagine, medical testing u
Old Man's War? (Score:2)
Artificial blood for my cat (Score:5, Interesting)
My cat got very sick a few years ago after being bitten by a raccoon. When the local vet couldn't diagnose the problem we took him to the College of Veterinary Medicine [msu.edu] at Michigan State University. The cat couldn't even stand up and was fading fast so they wanted to give him a transfusion. But when they tried to match his blood type the samples reacted against every donor they checked. So they offered to try an experimental artificial blood.
The artificial blood kept him alive long enough to identify a parasite infection, start him on treatment for the parasites, and let him recover until a natural blood donor could be found and infused. He was hospitalized for over a week but finally recovered and is perfectly healthy now. The interesting side effect is that he bulked up massively since the illness. He's over twenty pounds and extremely muscular. I don't know which artificial blood they used and what other side effects it had, but it seems like it might have more applications beyond just blood replacement for emergencies.
AlpineR
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If it was the same thing here, plastic molecules with an iron complex in them, perhaps the plastic couldn't be broken down.
It also wouldn't be detected by the body's endocrine system. Therefore, once your pet got better, he started generating the required amount of RBC's for him to function regularly - except that his blood already has the permanent synthetic RBCs in it!
I really shouldn't be a psychology major.
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http://www.biopure.com/shared/home.cfm?CDID=2&CPgI D=54 [biopure.com]
Re:Artificial blood for my cat (Score:5, Funny)
Lots of benifets beyond medical necessity (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a big deal for a lot of reasons. I'd like to point out a few of the less obvious
Jehova's Witnesses have already been mentioned, but add to this list dome forms of Judiasm, branches of Meninite Christianity, and others as divers as the Hmong [wikipedia.org] refuse blood transfusions. Artificial plasma (sometimes called artificial blood) is acceptable as are the use of cell savers. Unfortunately neither of these are effective against the uncontrolled loss of blood, or against blood based diseases that kill of red blood cells. The ability to artificially add O2 capacity and not just volume to the blood will a very welcome thing for these groups. From first hand experience being with families, I can tell you that no matter what the ultimate decision, being caught between needing blood and keeping faith is a heart breaking and guilt ridden experence for doctors, patients and families.
The other issue I want to bring up is the trust of the blood supply. There is an unfortunate and sad history of treating minorities in the US with inferior medicine, which has included infected blood. The rumors that such practices are ongoing persist particularly in the homeless populations. My perception from talking with some of the people who believe these rumors is that artificial blood would be perceived as safer. Perception is often stronger then reality when it comes to patient compliance, and even if this remains a sub-optimal solution when compared to whole blood (my guess is this will remain the case though IANAD) it is better then refusing treatment.
I hope that this is proven to be save and effective.
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Yeah but for secular darwinists it's a laugh and a half.
Celebrities of the World - rejoice! (Score:3, Funny)
"Plastic to the core, baby!"
Not the first time (Score:2)
My memory on this is vague. (Score:3, Interesting)
Reminds me of Neuromancer... (Score:2)
hmm... PurBlood anybody? (Score:3, Interesting)
But, but... (Score:2)
"The blood is the life, Mr. Renfield!"
Brilliant! (Score:2)
Patients will be in glowing health.
Re:Silicon (Score:5, Insightful)
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Anyway, I don't get why everyone gets so up in arms about testing stuff. If you want to find out if it works, the only good way is to have some brave volunteers try it out and see what happens. It's dumb to jump into something blindly. It's dumb to fully trust something before it's effects have been scientifically observed over time in the indended working evironment (in
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This could have the added benefit of using the research dollars simultaneously to fund orphanages.
Seriously, though. Blood is a pretty complex fluid, we've got RBCs, WBCs, platelets, trace hormones.
How would one grow RBCs? They have no nucleus, and thus can't be cultured, and you need so many that it would be a waste of stem cells to culture from there.
WBCs? Maybe from stem cells, if we can figure out how t
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No, a few opportunist lawyers managed to whip people into a lawsuit frenzy by claiming that any and all medical ailments suffered by a recipient of silicon breast implants must have been caused by the implants.
The successful lawsuits against Dow and the other companies involved in sili
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There's a reason you can still get silicon implants in Europe: longer research and more quality control of said implants.
The FDA is currently considering re-allowing silicon implants, given the advances in making safer containers.
Re:Silicon (Score:5, Funny)
but they found that flat square boobs weren't fashionable so they moved to using silicone.
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Yes, why switch to something new when we have a well-tested system, blood donations, that is totally free of long term side effects [bbc.co.uk], and has always been 100% safe [iht.com].
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IMHO, the research dollars would be better spent on developing a process to grow "natural" blood.
IMHO, the research dollars would be better spend on developing a means where I can fly using the power of my mind. Because that's cool.
I know that it'll cost a lot more than the other thing, and maybe isn't possible, but I'd much rather have that. Those boring pragmatists striving after achievable goals need to start thinking about what I want.
Honestly i think that any research into the artificial growth of bo
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Take a step back from the knee-jerk, luddite reaction to technology and think for a second about what the article is talking about here: an emergency supply of blood that is easier to store, transport, and perhaps even acquire (cheaper than drawing blood?). Complications from a foreign substance in your body are pretty minor co