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Medicine

FDA Warns Against Using Young Blood As Medical Treatment (cnn.com) 169

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned Tuesday against using plasma infusions from young blood donors to ward off the effects of normal aging as well as other more serious conditions. Plasma, the liquid portion of the blood, contains proteins that help clot blood. The infusions are promoted to treat a variety of conditions, including normal aging and memory loss as well as serious conditions such as dementia, multiple sclerosis, heart disease and post-traumatic stress disorder.

"There is no proven clinical benefit of infusion of plasma from young donors to cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent these conditions, and there are risks associated with the use of any plasma product," FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb wrote in a statement Tuesday. "The reported uses of these products should not be assumed to be safe or effective," he added, noting that the FDA "strongly" discourages consumers from using this therapy "outside of clinical trials under appropriate institutional review board and regulatory oversight." Gottlieb said that "a growing number of clinics" are offering plasma from young donors and similar therapies, though he did not name any in particular.

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FDA Warns Against Using Young Blood As Medical Treatment

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Hopefully this will lower young blood prices, been awhile since I've had a good drink.

    • Hopefully this will lower young blood prices

      A drop in plasma prices is not a good thing. If billionaires like Peter Thiel [vanityfair.com] pay even less to their penurious blood boys, that just increases income inequality in America.

      • by MikeS2k ( 589190 )

        Why is it that a lot of rich old men seem to be unnaturally interested in the fluids of young teenage boys?
        Especially those on the Religious Right. The more they preach Jesus and Moral Values, the more likely they are to have an interest in these young boys. Injecting their blood is one of the least perverse things these guys are doing.

      • Hopefully this will lower young blood prices

        A drop in plasma prices is not a good thing. If billionaires like Peter Thiel [vanityfair.com] pay even less to their penurious blood boys, that just increases income inequality in America.

        Just seems like a good way to get yourself aids or hepatitis or god knows what other disease if you ask me.

  • what next (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @11:39PM (#58149928)

    Government needs to keep their nose out of my business. What next, are they going to tell me I shouldn't eat the hearts of my enemies to gain their powers?

  • Risks (Score:2, Insightful)

    by markdavis ( 642305 )

    >" FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb wrote in a [statement] Tuesday. "

    At this time, that link for the statement is broken.

    Do be warned- there are, indeed, serious risks with infusing foreign blood. All kinds of blood-borne diseases can be transmitted, as well risk of injection site infections. You can also have severe allergic or other auto-immune reactions. At those *crazy* costs ($8k for just a single treatment of 1 liter), one would think you would be blood typed matched carefully to blood produc

    • Yep. I suffered terrible Anemia a couple of years back due to an undiagnosed internal hemorage from an ulcer. Twice I had been taken in , in a stretcher, and twice I refused blood infusions and went for the iron infusion instead (Which actually work really well).

      In my view the risks just where not worth it. If the Anemia was much worse, I might not have had a choice in it, but at that point I was still within range that an Iron infusion was sufficient.

    • there are, indeed, serious risks with infusing foreign blood.

      They aren't infusing blood, just plasma.

      All kinds of blood-borne diseases can be transmitted

      ... from blood. Not from plasma.

      • Re:Risks (Score:4, Interesting)

        by rahvin112 ( 446269 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @01:04AM (#58150216)

        Plasma is the stuff in blood that's not red blood cells. It's basically everything else other than the oxygen bearing red cells, this includes minerals, salts, proteins, sugars and vitamins along with blood clotting factors anti-bodies and a ton of other stuff. Any blood born pathogens are in the plasma, NOT in the red blood cells themselves (you can count on one hand the number of pathogens that could be inside a red blood cell).

        The plasma is also the area where things like antibodies and immune system components are contained. Usually the centrifuge that removes the red blood cells also takes the white cells out too but the risk of a allergic reaction is still high because of all the other components that are unique to the person that generated the plasma.

        Apparently you are under the misguided impression that the red blood cells are the only thing in blood and that is where pathogens are. This is not the case, red blood cells have pretty much a single purpose and that's to move oxygen. Everything else is moved in the plasma surrounding the blood cells.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      Yep, I got a free gift of Epstein-Barr virus and Cytomegalovirus with my blood transfusion(s).
    • Frequent transfusions have been proven to give you iron overload at least, and the iron chelation pills are nasty pieces of shit. Wish it made my dad young again, but all they do is keep his anemia under control. Anemia I suspect is related to blood shock he got from a transfusion after surgery.

      People are playing with fire.

  • by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @11:47PM (#58149948)

    One ridiculous medical quack cure after another, this one is from the *middle ages*, for God's sake.

        Eat from the food pyramid, get some exercise, take medicine only when necessary, and you will maximize your chances.

    • It's a brave new world, no doubt.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Umm...this treatment has recently been proven to work. I can't be bothered looking it up but it's not hard to find.

      • Umm...this treatment has recently been proven to work. I can't be bothered looking it up but it's not hard to find.

        When you make a claim at odds with the main point of the article which is cited and comes from a reputable source the onus is on you to provide a citation. Not doing so make you look like a pointless twat.

        Why did you even post?

    • One ridiculous medical quack cure after another, this one is from the *middle ages*, for God's sake.

      Except they tried it on lab rodents and it seems to work very well.

      Researchers are now trying to figure out what blood components are involved, to see if the gain can be had with synthetic compounds rather than whole plasma transfusions, and whether any of them will work on humans.

      Eat from the food pyramid, get some exercise, take medicine only when necessary, and you will maximize your chances.

      Wrong. The fo

    • Medical quack cures during the middle ages spread via word of mouth among the clueless masses.

      Modern social media is a way for the clueless masses to quickly spread (mis)information via word of mouth.

      During the interim period, we had broadcasting - a few people communicating to many, via books, newspapers, radio, and finally TV. These forms of communication cost money, so they were only available to people or organizations willing and able to pay for it. That meant what they were saying usually had
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The food pyramid we all learned in the 80s is totally wrong because it puts too much emphasis on grains / carbs.

    • One ridiculous medical quack cure after another, this one is from the *middle ages*, for God's sake.

      No, this one is from Methuselah's Children, by Robert A. Heinlein.

  • Rob Liefeld's art was terrible. [youtube.com] His proportions were madness and he couldn't draw feet to save his life. Why, the thought to using it to treat any medical condition is just absurd.
  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @12:18AM (#58150070) Journal

    I take geezer blood. I can kick kids off my lawn so fast now they're dizzy when they land. And my COBOL coding is faster.

  • It's Safe (Score:5, Funny)

    by locopuyo ( 1433631 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @12:56AM (#58150186) Homepage
    I've been doing it for 3000 years. It's perfectly safe.
  • Hemochromatosis (Score:4, Interesting)

    by RyanFenton ( 230700 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @01:11AM (#58150236)

    If folks really find this 'treatment' beneficial, find someone with hemochromatosis, and offer them a low payment for regular donation.

    For those that don't know, it's a condition where a persons gut is sort of out-of-control in terms of how much iron it absorbs, leading to a slight excess of iron. This slight extra iron can build up to unsafe levels if not removed for several decades- and the most convenient option for removal is simple: Draining about a blood donation worth of blood twice a week, until the levels are 'normal', then less frequently to maintain.

    The body replaces the blood just fine, and the blood is perfectly find for almost every use, since a slightly elevated iron level is rarely an issue for 99% of cases.

    Unfortunately, lots of blood organizations refuse to draw blood from folks with this condition for free - and want to charge for the regular blood donation as 'treatment' - and will even pour the blood out rather than use it to help anyone, with no clear reason other than unmentioned greed as motivations.

    So, if this 'treatment' becomes fashion, then I hope it leads to a less crazy situation for folks with that condition - though it is still crazy to use blood this way too. Perhaps in this case, two crazy situations make a sane result?

    Ryan Fenton

  • Am I the only one who thinks this sounds like the sort of comically evil plot Montgomery Burns might try, sending Smithers to tap kids' arms while they sleep?

    • Simpsons Did It (Score:4, Informative)

      by Etcetera ( 14711 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @01:25AM (#58150264) Homepage

      Am I the only one who thinks this sounds like the sort of comically evil plot Montgomery Burns might try, sending Smithers to tap kids' arms while they sleep?

      You're probably subconsciously thinking of this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Feud_(The_Simpsons) [wikipedia.org]

      Mr. Burns falls ill with hypohemia (a fictional life-threatening condition in which the body starts failing to produce enough blood, though it is akin to a real condition called hypovolemia) and needs a blood transfusion. His blood type, double O negative, is very rare, however, and none of the employees at Springfield Nuclear Power Plant have it. Homer discovers that Bart has double O negative blood and urges his son to donate, promising that he will be handsomely rewarded. Bart reluctantly agrees and his blood donation saves Mr. Burns' life. Mr. Burns is rejuvenated by the blood and he sends the Simpson family a thank you card. Enraged at Mr. Burns' paltry gesture, Homer writes an insulting reply, but Marge convinces him at the last minute not to send it. The next morning, Homer discovers that the letter is gone as Bart has mailed it.

      Bart explains that he knew Homer would probably change his mind, and decided to send the letter before that could happen. Homer desperately tries to prevent the letter from reaching Mr. Burns, but fails. Mr. Burns becomes furious and demands that Homer be punished. However, Smithers calls off the beating on the grounds, meaning that it's no way to thank the man who saved Mr. Burns' life. But soon, Mr. Burns soon realizes the favor Homer did for him was something good, and comes to his senses. He shakes hands with Smithers and tells him not to punish Homer, but to reward the Simpsons instead.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @01:34AM (#58150280)

    Plasma infusions don't make you youthful. For that, you have to drink the blood while it's still warm, fresh from the source.

    Doing so might make you very sensitive to sunlight, though.

  • Someone wanted their snake oil and patent medicines back.
  • by bigdavex ( 155746 ) on Wednesday February 20, 2019 @11:21AM (#58151870)

    It definitely worked for the Skeksis.

  • ... either ban the practice or shut the fuck up.

  • i hope this people arent force now to get plasma the old dracula way

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