In this form of blood donation, the donor's blood is collected and pumped into a machine that separates the blood into its components, the red blood cells, platelets, white blood cells, and plasma. Depending upon the type of donation, one component is kept while the rest are returned to the donor.
The advantages of automated blood donations are:
Automated blood donations take longer than donating whole blood (1-1/2 to 2 hours). Because of this, we provide televisions and movies for the donor to watch during the donation.
In this type of automated donation, platelets are collected and the remaining blood components are returned to the donor. Platelets help blood to clot and the platelets collected during plateletpheresis commonly are given to people with leukemia, people receiving chemotherapy and babies with severe infections.
In order to be eligible to donate platelets, the donor must meet all of the requirements for whole blood donation. They must also:
Did You Know
Platelets from a whole blood donation or automated donation are only good for five days. Red blood cells from a whole blood donation are good for 42 days.
In this type of automated donation, the liquid portion of the blood (plasma) is collected and the remaining blood components are returned to the donor. Plasma helps blood to clot and the plasma collected is commonly given to patients whose livers do not work, patients with burns and patients with severe bacterial infections in their blood.
To donate plasma, donors must meet all of the requirements for whole blood donation. Donors who are blood group AB are special plasma donors because their plasma can be given to any of the other blood types. Because of this, AB plasma is frequently in short supply.
Donors can donate plasma every four weeks.
To learn more about automated donations or to see if you are eligible, contact us at (507) 284-4475 or donateblood@mayo.edu.
Did You Know
AB+, AB- and IGA deficient donors are best suited for plasma collections. They make up a very small population of donors.