The Man With the Golden Blood 75
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.
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he will become a frequent contributor one day.
Yes, re-submitting articles that were on the front page in the past 7 days is incredibly helpful.
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Because while reading this you may eventually learn something?
Because it is shinning a light on some rare people who can only give a fuck?
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Because, one day, a large pharmaceutical corporation will use his blood to create a life-saving serum, and give him precisely $0 because he needed a blood test at a doctor's office, and you have to sign a waiver of all rights to any fluids or tissue sent in for testing.
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I am cool with a random sample of my blood ending up being a life-saving serum that I make $0 dollars from. Assuming that my name isn't attached to that and I don't get strung up by my feet to be feasted on by vampires.
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This part of the text is where you should start then (By the way, I am certainly not a physician, just interested, as you are):
There are 35 blood group systems, organised 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 AB group is the earliest discovered (?) blood group system. The Rh group another (that +/- thing you were taught is an extreme simplification of it and points only to one antigen from the complete 60-odd set of Rh antigens). And there are 33 more blood group systems, apparently. I knew there was more than AB and Rh but I didn't know there were that many myself.
Start on some Wiki
Re:Tell me why I should care. (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a story about people. It's not about you. You shouldn't "care". But it's an interesting, well-written story anyway.
Re:Tell me why I should care. (Score:5, Insightful)
The question of the GP was probably not so outlandish. I, for one, was wondering the same. Ok, it's interesting that he's got some oddity in his blood. But ... what does that mean? Can it be used to find out something about our blood in general? Is he something like the "perfect donor"? Does it somehow express itself in his being or behaviour? Does it affect his life?
I admit I only perused the article, but aside of some anecdotes the bottom line is that yes, it's rare, and finding donors is difficult. That's as far as I can tell it. It's entertaining. Not very insightful, but entertaining.
Re:Tell me why I should care. (Score:5, Funny)
Right, he only perused it, he hasn't had the time to grok it.
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Probably means he will be fucked if he ever needs a transfusion.
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No "probably" about it, but blood donated for personal use also requires a waiver allowing its use by anyone else while it is stored.
Re:Tell me why I should care. (Score:4, Informative)
The question of the GP was probably not so outlandish. I, for one, was wondering the same. Ok, it's interesting that he's got some oddity in his blood. But ... what does that mean? Can it be used to find out something about our blood in general? Is he something like the "perfect donor"? Does it somehow express itself in his being or behaviour? Does it affect his life?
In a nutshell, his blood is the universal blood for people with rare Rh blood types (but not truly universal blood that can be given to absolutely anyone, as I understand it). It makes his blood a backup for quite a few rare blood types, but perversely his blood type is so much rarer than those others that supplies of his blood type are more tightly controlled than other rare types.
There is a hint in the article that people with his blood type are expected to be short-tempered (probably not just because of the constant requests to give blood), but there are no proven links between blood type and personality traits, afaik.
One interesting point is that this guy's blood is incredibly rare (and therefore also potentially valuable for both research and direct medical use), but it actually costs him money - when he is asked to donate blood, usually by going to the center that needs the blood instead of his local donation center (helps keep the blood fresh, but mainly to avoid the bureaucratic headaches of transporting blood across borders), he has to take time off work and arrange his own transport unless something unofficial is provided - the blood donors in most Eurpoean countries receive no financial compensation at all, even to out-of-pocket expenses.
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But it's an interesting, well-written story anyway.
Unlike the summary, which is not intriguing or informing, as a previous poster alluded to.
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Re:Tell me why I should care. (Score:5, Informative)
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"we're not all hemotologists" /.
Looks like sombody didn't read the TOS when they were joining
Disappointing (Score:3)
Thinking of actual gold-colored blood, I was expecting a human/arachnid hybrid. A spider-man, if you will.
Re:Disappointing (Score:4, Funny)
Manspider, Manspider,
Can do any human like jerb
Surfs the web, posts trolling lies
Uses chopsticks to catch flies
Look Out!
Here comes the Manspider!
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Gold, as in the Golden rule - he who has the gold, rules.
Which, interestingly enough, is pretty much the opposite of what is happening. Here you have this guy with an irreplaceable, limited resource. If he was in the US, he would have been man handled into a lawyers office and encouraged to be part of some corporation that could financially benefit from his genetic makeup. As it is (according TFA) he has to pay for taxi fair to the blood donation centers.
Seems like a nice guy, stuck in a weird situation
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Yeah b/c any of the regular nurses and whatnot at the blood banks make a dime from his special blood.
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Oddly enough, his last name appears to be "Parker"
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Thinking of actual gold-colored blood, I was expecting a human/arachnid hybrid. A spider-man, if you will.
Odd, I just thought they were Swiss. [sbs.com.au]
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If you have a sufficiently rare blood type (Score:5, Interesting)
You get your own blood drive:
http://www.archonstl.org/31/he... [archonstl.org]
R. H. Null (Score:3, Funny)
Does he have a patent or copyright on his blood? (Score:2)
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?
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Q: what is the rarest blood type in the world? (Score:3, Funny)
A: Krylon Technicolor type A
Mike Shinoda [wikipedia.org] is the only known carrier.
rare or just not looked for? (Score:3)
Re: rare or just not looked for? (Score:1)
It is tested. If you donate once and you're a rare, they'll let you know.
I'm actually a very common a+ with an unusual antigen (or more appropriately, lack of).
Re:rare or just not looked for? (Score:5, Informative)
The deal is if you are (say) an Rh positive fetus in an Rh negative mom who was previously exposed to another fetus's D antigens (and D is often the culprit) you can get your blood cells nailed by mom's previously-formed anti-D antibodies. You get anemia, jaundice as well, and the potential various bad side effects therefrom (heart damage, brain damage, swelling all over [google.com][may not be safe for work]). Similar havoc ensues with anti-K. Preventive therapy with RhoGAM is available to prevent anti-D disease; it's a soup of anti-D antibodies that scavenge any fetal Rh-D positive blood cells that happen to find their way into mom's circulation. It's produced from pooled human blood plasma, though even most Jehovah's Witnesses (since a 1974 church opinion) and Jews (because there's an escape hatch in kashrut for saving human life) find it acceptable for treatment in order to prevent this fairly terrifying surprise G-d had in store for a few unlucky babies.
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My si
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It's because in case of rare blood types, there are subtles anomalies in the standard blood typing process.
These anomalies lead to more thorough explorations.
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All donated blood is antigen-typed, because it can be fatal for a recipient if it is not.
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The military saves lives! (Score:1)
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!
The military saves lives! (Score:3, Funny)
I donate blood all the time, it's just not mine. They don't ask questions about where it comes from. Anymore.
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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!
That's interesting. Some things are the same everywhere. In the US Army we got the day off for donating blood, too. It's a great idea and was one of the few really nice perks. (Side note: every three-day weekend we automatically got a fourth day off. See the Army's not *that* bad, hah).
I eventually earned a five gallon donation lapel pin from the Red Cross after I left the service. I told someone this once and she said "You donated 5 gallons of blood today?" *faceslap* Well I'm B+ which is not rare bu
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iirc we just got the evening off for donating(Finland).
and we stayed every 3rd weekend at the barracks, just cause, no reason. you apparently can sleep 16 hours a day and play the rest 8 hours tekken tag tournament and still eat two pizzas in a day.
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The Man With the Golden Blood (Score:3)
Worst Bond film ever.
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No Mr. Bond, I expect you to bleed! *psychotic laugh*
Technically, that's from "Goldfinger" (which, coincidentally, I re-watched on TV last week), not "The Man with the Golden Gun", but it's all good... Here's the related XKCD, Centrifugal Force [xkcd.com]
Do Not Tell NJ Gov Christie (Score:1)
Gov Christie find out he will set-up a Rh-null Travel Ban at Newark International to imprison all travelers from Europe.
Man That Would Suck (Score:2)
Cool photos; my local blood bank is very different (Score:2)
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.)
Already detected but dismissed? (Score:3)
wonder if a look back over historic records will find more of these that were dismissed as 'testing error' or 'typo'?
I hope the hospital (Score:2)
has appropriate procedures for dealing with this nullbloodtype exception. Just think of the buffer overflow attacks