Blood and Platelet Donation

400 viewsBiologyOther

I donated blood (whole blood) for the first time like 4 weeks ago. Two weeks later, they called me asking if I could also donate platelets soon. I did so yesterday. While donating, I was asked if I would be willing to donate again in the near future. I said that I would, and they asked if I would be willing to donate platelets again, since that’s what’s in short supply, because of its short shelf life.

Why would they want platelets more than whole blood?
When I donate whole blood, can’t the platelets from that be used?

I would imagine it has something to do with the quantity of platelets that they receive through that donation process, but if the shelf life is much shorter for lone platelets, and the process is grueling (it took 2.5 hours as opposed to 15 minutes, and I felt horrible during), why not just ask for whole blood donations then isolate platelets from there?

In: Biology

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Because people can donate platelets WAY more frequently. Once every 10 days pretty much. This is because it doesn’t take away your red blood cells you need to move oxygen around your body.

And, when you donate just platelets, yes they can take WAY MORE platelets. 1 platelet only donation will collect 6 to 10 times the platelets they could get from a single whole blood donation.

You’re right, they could remove platelets from whole blood, but that also then means that the whole blood isn’t whole blood anymore. And that extra processing is more work to do after the fact (and I am also not sure if that whole blood could even be used anymore after the platelets have been removed) 

You are viewing 1 out of 4 answers, click here to view all answers.