full blood - définition. Qu'est-ce que full blood
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est full blood - définition

OCCURS WHEN A PERSON OR OTHER MAMMAL VOLUNTARILY HAS BLOOD DRAWN
Blood donor; Give blood; Blood donations; Give Blood; Giving blood; Donating blood; Blooddrive; Blood Drives; Donor blood; Blood Donation; Blood giving; Full blood; Donate blood; Whole blood donation; Blood Donor; Blood donor sites; Donations of blood; Blood market; Blood trade
  • A relatively large needle is used for blood donations.
  • A mechanical tray agitates the bag to mix the blood with anticoagulants and prevent clotting.
  • A patient's health screening report given after a blood donation
  • Whole blood is often separated, using a centrifuge, into components for storage and transportation.
  • US Navy]] sailor donating blood
  • Bruising three days after donation
  • A donor's arm at various stages of donation. The two photographs on the left show a blood pressure cuff being used as a tourniquet.
  • Blood donation [[pictogram]]
  • Insertion of a butterfly needle into a vein to begin the blood draw process
  • Suma-ku]], [[Kobe]], [[Hyōgo Prefecture]], [[Japan]]
  • Monument to blood donors in [[Ávila, Spain]]
  • Platelets collected by using [[apheresis]] at an [[American Red Cross]] donation center
  • Blood donation center at the [[University Hospital of Basel]], Switzerland. From left to right: Two cell separators for [[apheresis]], secluded office for pre-donation blood pressure measurement and [[blood count]], and on the right, chairs for whole blood donations.
  • Ruby award from the [[Singapore Red Cross]] for 75 voluntary donations
  • UK]] awards for 50, 25 and 100 donations

Complete blood count         
  • alt=See caption.
  • Abbott]] Cell-Dyn 1700 automated analyzer
  • Blood film from a person with [[chronic myeloid leukemia]]: many immature and abnormal white blood cells are visible.
  • Blood film of [[essential thrombocythemia]]. Platelets are visible as small purple structures.
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  • alt=A complex tube and flask apparatus attached to a measurement station
  • Blood smear from a newborn baby, showing a few nucleated red cells
  • alt=Diagram of the manual hematocrit test showing the fraction of red blood cells measured as 0.46.
  • alt=Schematic of the Coulter principle. A particle suspended in a conductive medium passes through an aperture, causing an increase in impedance
  • [[Dmitri Leonidovich Romanowsky]] invented Romanowsky staining.
  • [[Red blood cell agglutination]]: clumps of red blood cells are visible on the blood smear
  • alt=A scatter plot displaying many differently coloured clusters, labelled with the type of white blood cell they correspond to.
  • alt=CBC samples in a rack, waiting to be run on a bench-top analyzer
MEDICAL LABORATORY TEST
Full blood count; Blood count; Blood cell count; Hemogram; Hemogramme; Full blood counts; Complete blood cell count; Blood counts; White blood cell count; White cell count; Complete Blood Count; Full blood exam; Full blood examination; Red blood count; White count; Total RBC count; RBC count; Total blood count; White cell counts; Hematology panel; Cell Population Data; Haemogram; Research Population Data; Positional parameters; Investigation Screen parameters; Full Blood Count; White blood cell counts; Rule of three (hematology)

A complete blood count (CBC), also known as a full blood count (FBC), is a set of medical laboratory tests that provide information about the cells in a person's blood. The CBC indicates the counts of white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets, the concentration of hemoglobin, and the hematocrit (the volume percentage of red blood cells). The red blood cell indices, which indicate the average size and hemoglobin content of red blood cells, are also reported, and a white blood cell differential, which counts the different types of white blood cells, may be included.

The CBC is often carried out as part of a medical assessment and can be used to monitor health or diagnose diseases. The results are interpreted by comparing them to reference ranges, which vary with sex and age. Conditions like anemia and thrombocytopenia are defined by abnormal complete blood count results. The red blood cell indices can provide information about the cause of a person's anemia such as iron deficiency and vitamin B12 deficiency, and the results of the white blood cell differential can help to diagnose viral, bacterial and parasitic infections and blood disorders like leukemia. Not all results falling outside of the reference range require medical intervention.

The CBC is usually performed by an automated hematology analyzer, which counts cells and collects information on their size and structure. The concentration of hemoglobin is measured, and the red blood cell indices are calculated from measurements of red blood cells and hemoglobin. Manual tests can be used to independently confirm abnormal results. Approximately 10–25% of samples require a manual blood smear review, in which the blood is stained and viewed under a microscope to verify that the analyzer results are consistent with the appearance of the cells and to look for abnormalities. The hematocrit can be determined manually by centrifuging the sample and measuring the proportion of red blood cells, and in laboratories without access to automated instruments, blood cells are counted under the microscope using a hemocytometer.

In 1852, Karl Vierordt published the first procedure for performing a blood count, which involved spreading a known volume of blood on a microscope slide and counting every cell. The invention of the hemocytometer in 1874 by Louis-Charles Malassez simplified the microscopic analysis of blood cells, and in the late 19th century, Paul Ehrlich and Dmitri Leonidovich Romanowsky developed techniques for staining white and red blood cells that are still used to examine blood smears. Automated methods for measuring hemoglobin were developed in the 1920s, and Maxwell Wintrobe introduced the Wintrobe hematocrit method in 1929, which in turn allowed him to define the red blood cell indices. A landmark in the automation of blood cell counts was the Coulter principle, which was patented by Wallace H. Coulter in 1953. The Coulter principle uses electrical impedance measurements to count blood cells and determine their sizes; it is a technology that remains in use in many automated analyzers. Further research in the 1970s involved the use of optical measurements to count and identify cells, which enabled the automation of the white blood cell differential.

Blood donation         
A blood donation occurs when a person voluntarily has blood drawn and used for transfusions and/or made into biopharmaceutical medications by a process called fractionation (separation of whole blood components). Donation may be of whole blood, or of specific components directly (apheresis).
give blood         
allow blood to be removed medically from one's body in order to be stored for use in transfusions.

Wikipédia

Blood donation

A blood donation occurs when a person voluntarily has blood drawn and used for transfusions and/or made into biopharmaceutical medications by a process called fractionation (separation of whole blood components). Donation may be of whole blood, or of specific components directly (apheresis). Blood banks often participate in the collection process as well as the procedures that follow it.

Today in the developed world, most blood donors are unpaid volunteers who donate blood for a community supply. In some countries, established supplies are limited and donors usually give blood when family or friends need a transfusion (directed donation). Many donors donate for several reasons, such as a form of charity, general awareness regarding the demand for blood, increased confidence in oneself, helping a personal friend or relative, and social pressure. Despite the many reasons that people donate, not enough potential donors actively donate. However, this is reversed during disasters when blood donations increase, often creating an excess supply that will have to be later discarded. In countries that allow paid donation some people are paid, and in some cases there are incentives other than money such as paid time off from work. People can also have blood drawn for their own future use (autologous donation). Donating is relatively safe, but some donors have bruising where the needle is inserted or may feel faint.

Potential donors are evaluated for anything that might make their blood unsafe to use. The screening includes testing for diseases that can be transmitted by a blood transfusion, including HIV and viral hepatitis. The donor must also answer questions about medical history and take a short physical examination to make sure the donation is not hazardous to their health. How often a donor can donate varies from days to months based on what component they donate and the laws of the country where the donation takes place. For example, in the United States, donors must wait 56 days (eight weeks) between whole-blood donations but only seven days between platelet apheresis donations and twice per seven-day period in plasmapheresis.

The amount of blood drawn and the methods vary. The collection can be done manually or with automated equipment that takes only specific components of the blood. Most of the components of blood used for transfusions have a short shelf life, and maintaining a constant supply is a persistent problem. This has led to some increased interest in autotransfusion, whereby a patient's blood is salvaged during surgery for continuous reinfusion—or alternatively, is self-donated prior to when it will be needed. Generally, the notion of donation does not refer to giving to one's self, though in this context it has become somewhat acceptably idiomatic.

Exemples du corpus de texte pour full blood
1. Baldridge, 73, has official government documents showing him to be a descendant of a full–blood Cherokee.
2. He believes that the early clerics suppressed such portraits because they knew these were Jesus‘s full–blood brothers and sisters.
3. The last full–blood Tasmanian Aboriginal died in 1888, but the original population continues to exist in the form of Tasmanians of mixed Aboriginal and European descent.
4. Rubio said Thursday, 28 hours after the operation, that her condition was satisfactory with full blood flow in each of her legs.