| apheresis |
A special blood donation procedure in which plasma or selected cellular elements, such as platelets or white cells, are separated from the other parts of the blood and retained. Blood is drawn and processed through a cell separator, and the other cells and plasma are returned to the body. Apheresis takes approximately two hours compared with a whole blood donation of about eight to ten minutes.
Ãâó: www.yourbloodcenter.org/glossary.htm
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| apheresis |
The channeling of blood out of the body and through specialized single-use tubing and equipment in order to extract various blood cell types, such as platelets or stem cells, from the bloodstream. After these cells are extracted, the blood is returned to the body. Also called hemapheresis, or leukapheresis for the extraction of white blood cells.
Ãâó: www.patientcenters.com/lymphoma/news/nhl7.html
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| apheresis, therapeutic |
Removal of unwanted or pathological components from a patient's blood by means of a continuous-flow separator; the process is similar to hemodialysis, as treated blood is returned to the patient. The removal of cellular ma
Ãâó:
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| apheresis |
An automated method of separating platelets or plasma from the donor's blood and returning all but that component to the donor. Also known as Automated Blood Collection, or ABC.
Ãâó: bloodcenter.stanford.edu/about_blood/glossary.html
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| apheresis |
A process by which certain cells are removed from the blood by a machine that draws the blood through a special IV catheter. Certain cells are collected and the rest of the blood is returned through the catheter.
Ãâó: www.averacancer.org/ResourceLibrary/cancerterms.ht...
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