Yesterday was the second time that I've given a double red cell donation at my local Red Cross.
For those of you unfamiliar with this newfangled process, it works thusly. For a regular, whole blood donation, you give a pint of red goo straight from your vein to the bag. The three major constituents of blood (excluding white blood cells) are the red blood cells, plasma, and platelets. Without getting into too much detail (read: this could be bullshit I just made up), the plasma is the fluid, the red blood cells carry oxygen, and the platelets are an important factor in producing blood clots.
So, when you give a double red donation, you give twice as many red blood cells as you do during a regular donation...but you get your plasma and platelets back. No, they don't give you a doggy bag filled with icky yellow liquid, they run your blood through a centrifuge, spin out the red blood cells, which should be heavier (hemoglobin has iron in it, right?) than the rest of the junk. Then they give you back your platelets, plasma, and they throw in half a pint of saline solution at no extra charge. Wonderous, isn't it? They pause the donation at three separate times and give you back your fluids. It goes back through the same needle and you can't even feel it! The best part about the donation is that your blood can get to another person much faster because it doesn't need to hang around to get separated.
So, my first time through, I was sitting there, marveling at the wonders of modern science when my lips started to tingle. No worries, I thought, it's just nerves. But them my stomach started to twitch a little bit and I started to tremble. I couldn't figure out what was going on. I've given gallons of blood in my lifetime and never had any adverse effects. The donation ends and I need to sit for a good 20 minutes before I feel like moving.
I thought about it for a while and then I came up with a hypothesis (later confirmed by Sprocketplug Senior, Doctor of Medicine). It turns out that I was cold. Why, you ask? Well, during the return, they gave me a little more than half a pint of saline solution. That's just salt water, but it was being stored at room temperature, let's call it 67 degrees Farenheit. Normal body temp is around 98 degrees so that was a little shock to my system. I didn't recognize the feeling, because I've never gotten cold from the inside out. Weird, right?
Anyway, the second time was better since I brought a heavy sweatshirt and winter cap, but I still got the same trembly feeling. I might go back to just giving a pint of whole blood, but we'll see.
Sprocketplug out.
11 comments:
giving blood rules. good work.
i watched Outlander today. not that great. not sure why my expectations were so high. well, actually they weren't. and i wasn't disappointed. or surprised. which one of those options is a double negative, making it appear as though i thought the movie would be awesome and it turned out to be awesome. i'm going with the other choice. morwens are cool though.
oh, hey. so when you come to MN, we should donate tons of blood together. then do our marathon 72 hour awake test while shooting a mocumentary on jim henson.
who's this fast eddie guy?
fast eddie?! dude, if "pech" doesn't know who i am, i'll come over there and kick him in the face (after kicking you in the groin, of course).
hey, have you seen S. Darko? i haven't. but i have it from netflix now. hopefully will watch it soon.
humans are smarter than apes.
hey, bring it, fast eddie. you and me in the playground after school. well, a lot after school, i don't want the kids to see me kick your @ss, beotch.
and another thing. your tie looks stupid.
oh yeah, well, your brain is stupid.
oh yeah, well, does pete ever update his blog? i mean, like, really, like, like, yeah.
yep. let's get him.
Wow! Thank you! I always wanted to write in my site something like that. Can I take part of your post to my blog?
Feel free to take whatever you like. :-)
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