| Literature DB >> 14507278 |
Axel Pruss1, Guido A Heymann, Anette Hell, Ulrich J Kalus, Dietmar Krausch, Thomas Dörner, Holger H Kiesewetter, Abdulgabar Salama.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Natural blood cell chimerism rarely occurs in humans. The case of a patient who developed transfusion reaction due to the transfusion of chimeric RBCs is reported. CASE REPORT: A 61-year-old male patient with blood group O received two units of packed and O-grouped RBCs after elective kidney surgery. Immediately after blood transfusion, the patient developed a hemolytic transfusion attack. The serologic re-examination revealed only a mixed-field pattern of agglutination of RBCs in one of the two transfused units. The donor of this unit was an apparently healthy 24-year-old male with a twin sister. Both of them showed an identical mixture of roughly 95 percent group O and 5 percent group B RBCs by gel agglutination technology and flow cytometry. The results were also confirmed by ABO blood group genotyping.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14507278 DOI: 10.1046/j.1537-2995.2003.00515.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transfusion ISSN: 0041-1132 Impact factor: 3.157