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1 the oldest compatible units available in the blood bank).
2 ealthy blood donors from the French National Blood Bank.
3 dentified via a large, US-based, public cord blood bank.
4 ed controls was obtained from our scientific blood bank.
5 d 40 healthy control subjects' sera from the blood bank.
6 HHV-8 in a healthy donor to a North American blood bank.
7 es hemolysis during aging in vivo and in the blood bank.
8 s their usefulness in the context of African blood banks.
9 t centers, donor centers, and umbilical cord blood banks.
10 ministration and the American Association of Blood Banks.
11 ng Group on Ethical Issues in Umbilical Cord Blood Banking.
12 ive surveillance by the medical directors of blood banks (3 patients), hematologists (6), and the man
13 ncombat settings, such as the mobile walking blood bank and a frozen blood program.
14  retrospective cohort study using nationwide blood bank and health register data from Sweden (main co
15 TICIPANTS: This cohort study used nationwide blood bank and health register data in Sweden and involv
16 2019 to July 2020 at Maputo Central Hospital Blood Bank and the National Reference Blood Center.
17 cular testing methods were introduced to the blood bank and transfusion medicine community more than
18 shed since January 2012 on the topic of cord blood banking and cord blood stem cell transplantation w
19            We review the development of cord blood banking and transplantation and then discuss the s
20                                         Cord blood banking and transplantation of cord blood stem cel
21                                         Most blood banks and donation centres are located in urban ce
22 r in the rosters of three region-wide Danish blood banks and invited them to fill in a questionnaire
23  years in the rosters of 3 regionwide Danish blood banks and invited them to fill in a questionnaire
24 las or 0.9% sodium chloride were prepared by blood banks and issued to participating sites according
25 rent ages), therapeutic (cold-stored RBCs in blood banks) and pathologic (RBCs from sickle cell disea
26 cal services such as pharmacy, laboratories, blood bank, and central supply rooms should be located a
27 direct costs from within the inpatient unit, blood bank, and outpatient clinic.
28 erventional radiology, gynecologic oncology, blood bank, and specialized surgical teams when taking c
29 bin are important for clinical laboratories, blood banks, and for point-of-care diagnostics.
30 tions, clinical diagnostic laboratories, and blood banks are desperately searching for a possibility
31 ts, transplant surgeons, anesthesia, nurses, blood bank as well as laboratory staff, a clinical routi
32                Participants were selected in blood banks at 2 Brazilian centers.
33 rs began keeping thawed plasma (TP) in their blood banks (BBs), markedly reducing time to release of
34 d products handled by the Danish and Swedish blood banks between 1968 and 2010, to address the clinic
35  Individuals with expertise in anthropology, blood banking, bone marrow transplantation, ethics, law,
36                                     The Cord Blood Bank (CBB) contacted the donor's family and establ
37                                   The Sydney Blood Bank Cohort is a group of patients with slowly pro
38  the use of animal protein-free medium and a blood-bank-compatible closed system of gas-permeable pla
39 entrates stored in Additive Solution-3 under blood bank conditions for up to 42 days.
40 usion model with blood stored under standard blood banking conditions for 2 (new), 21 (intermediate),
41 rage of human red blood cells under standard blood banking conditions results in the accumulation of
42 hroughout platelet storage over 9 days under blood-banking conditions.
43                                   Of the 349 blood bank control samples, only one contained the Tyr-5
44 n 467 liver disease explants and 3.7% in 349 blood bank controls (P < .0001).
45 7 of 467 liver disease explants and 2 of 349 blood bank controls were previously reported in 5 analyz
46 om HemaCare (Van Nuys, California) or Carter Blood Bank (Dallas, Texas).
47 ssociated Guillain-Barre Syndrome cases, and blood bank data.
48  AABB (formerly, the American Association of Blood Banks) developed this guideline on appropriate use
49  AABB (formerly, the American Association of Blood Banks) developed this guideline to provide clinica
50  stored at 4 degrees C obtained from a local blood bank, diluted 1:10 in phosphate buffer.
51  of these patients and 232 unrelated healthy blood bank donor controls were examined for the mutation
52 tics (0.14 +/- 0.08) and compared to healthy blood bank donors (0.14 +/- 0.06) (P < 0.001).
53 otics (P = 0.039) and to none of ten healthy blood bank donors (P = 0.046).
54  and naive CD4(+) T cells were isolated from blood bank donors and peanut-allergic patients.
55 o were receiving antibiotics and ten healthy blood bank donors were studied for expression of circula
56 a, Nepal, and Pakistan and 20 United Kingdom blood bank donors.
57 enting TRALI poses a difficult challenge for blood-banking experts, because it is unknown which measu
58                      More specifically, most blood banks follow the "first-in-first-out" principle to
59   We examined the feasibility of a community blood bank granulocyte transfusion program utilizing com
60 ons were found in both the liver disease and blood bank groups and, hence, likely represent polymorph
61 lic investment in donor recruitment and cord-blood banks has expanded access to HSCT.
62 , and AABB (formerly American Association of Blood Banks), have developed and validated a revised def
63 s can diagnose and report TRALI cases to the blood bank; importantly, researchers can use this defini
64                   After dramatic advances in blood banking in the 1970s, blood donor centers began su
65 hods is sufficiently sensitive to be used by blood banks in malaria-endemic countries.
66                          New products in the blood bank include group A or group A low-titer B thawed
67 ency of economic resources also restrict the blood bank industry.
68 nsfusions in blood deserts: civilian walking blood banks, intraoperative autotransfusion, and drone-b
69                    The traditional system of blood banking is logistically complex and expensive for
70                                         Cord blood banking is performed throughout the world.
71 as well as related preclinical studies, cord blood banking issues, and ethical concerns, will be addr
72 of 721 HBsAg-positive people screened at the blood bank linked into care.
73 commendations by the American Association of Blood Banks on outcome of transfused critically ill pati
74  voluntary non-remunerated donors, number of blood banks or centres, and national blood policies.
75 umber of CCP units dispensed to hospitals by blood banking organizations and correlated that usage wi
76 ody causing hemolysis and communication with blood bank personnel are mandatory in this setting.
77 teamwork and careful cooperation between the blood bank, pharmacy, administration, hematologists, sur
78 rs, they have a limited ability to inform US blood-banking policy.
79 ndard-issue RBCs in accordance with standard blood bank practice (n = 189).
80 the use of fresh RBCs compared with standard blood bank practice did not improve outcomes in prematur
81 fe in most clinical settings and the current blood banking practices of using standard-issue blood sh
82 s currently no evidence for implementing new blood banking procedures to identify possible carriers i
83 fected donors, and Babesia parasites survive blood-banking procedures and storage.
84 t 11 geographically diverse sites (including blood banks, public health clinics, general medical clin
85 ng injury (ALI), the American Association of Blood Banks recently recommended rapid implementation of
86 cal records, imaging data, nursing overtime, blood bank records, and trauma registry data were analyz
87                    Using trauma registry and blood bank records, the authors identified pelvic fractu
88 ata Registry, patients' medical records, and blood bank records.
89 to a standard of the American Association of Blood Banks requiring duplicate DNA isolation and retest
90                        It requires extensive blood-banking resources and is associated with high mort
91 search areas that include the food industry, blood bank safety and human and veterinary disease diagn
92                                      Current blood bank screening methods do not identify infected do
93 tion from endemic areas and newly instituted blood bank screening, US clinicians are likely to see an
94 r large-volume plasma screening, either in a blood bank setting or in other diagnostic applications.
95 emoval complied with American Association of Blood Banks standards.
96 wer sites were observed at 25 degrees C, the blood bank storage temperature ( approximately 350 sites
97  conventional additive solution Adsol during blood bank storage.
98 ent review was to describe recent changes in blood banking thinking, practice, and products that affe
99  selection and release of CBUs from the cord blood bank to the transplant center for transplantation.
100 can Pathologists and American Association of Blood Banks to limit and detect platelet bacterial conta
101 od donor", "blood donation","blood safety", "blood bank", "transfusion safety", and "blood services".
102 y had noncryptogenic cirrhosis, and from 349 blood bank volunteers.
103              The pack type used (supplied by blood banks) was based only on availability at the time.
104 f CD in the United States to date outside of blood banks, we found a CD prevalence of 1.24%.
105 communities and 29 (9.7%, 6.8-13.6) from the blood bank were eligible for treatment.
106  of whom acquired HCV on-study from a single blood bank while five had an abnormal baseline ALT.
107 asy implementation in HIV vaccine trials and blood banks worldwide.
108 ilitated by the cold storage of RBC units in blood banks worldwide.

 
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