The closed washing system is able to process both high- and low-glycerol-treated RBCs. Stability after washing during cold storage in SAGM, as measured by hemolysis, is better for HGM cells as compared to LGM cells.
Historically, the Australian Defence Force (ADF) has sourced all its blood supplies from the Australian Red Cross Blood Service. Recent ADF operations in the Middle East have highlighted a need to rely on other nations’ blood supply systems.
In 2008, the ADF embedded a surgical and intensive care team into the Netherlands‐led forward health facility at the Uruzgan Medical Centre at Tarin Kowt in Afghanistan. To date, three teams have provided 2‐month rotations as part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.
The Netherlands armed forces use a sophisticated system for supply of liquid and frozen blood products (frozen red cells, plasma and platelets).
We review Australian experience with the Dutch system of supplying blood products for major trauma resuscitation in Afghanistan.
Omitting glycerol supernatant reduction before freezing simplifies the cryopreservation procedure and increases the stability and therefore the outdating period of thawed RBCs. This increases the practical applicability of cryopreserved RBCs in both civil (rare blood) and military blood transfusion practice.
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