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CrowdScience

What’s the point of blood types?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 26 June 2020

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you put one person’s blood into another person , sometimes it’s fine and sometimes it’s a death sentence.

French physician Jean-Baptiste Denis discovered this when he performed the first blood transfusion back in 1667. He put the blood of a lamb into a 15-year boy. The teenager survived but Denis’s third attempt killed the patient and led to a murder charge.

In 1900, Austrian doctor Karl Landsteiner discovered the reason for this lottery – blood types. The red blood cells in our bodies are decorated with different marker molecules called antigens. These define us as A, B, AB or O blood type. And this is just one of 38 different systems for classifying our blood. CrowdScience listeners have discovered that we aren’t the only animal with blood types and want to know more.

Dogs have 12 different blood groups, so how do they cope when they need a transfusion? CrowdScience meets some very good dogs who donate a pint to the pet blood bank in return for a toy and a treat. Each pint saving up to 4 other dogs’ lives.

We also hear how examining our blood types can tell us more about our links to our ape-like cousins and how the human species spread around the world. And what about the future of blood types – can we use science, and animal blood to get around the problems of transfusions?

Producer and Presenter: Marnie Chesterton Photo: Red Blood Cells. Credit: Getty Images

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of

0:07.0

Happiness Podcast.

0:08.0

For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want

0:14.4

to share that science with you.

0:16.1

And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley.

0:19.4

I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that

0:25.5

calmer place within. Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:31.6

This episode of crowd science starts with a bloody tale.

0:35.0

Let's go back to 17th century France.

0:38.0

Medicine at this time is basic, a mixture of trial and error,

0:42.0

with emphasis on the error.

0:44.3

So it happened in Paris, in June 1667, a Frenchman called Jean-Battice Duny.

0:56.8

He was a doctor of Louis the 14.

1:00.5

He is a doctor who performs the first blood transfusion.

1:05.0

So he gave blood to a young patient,

1:11.0

a 15 year old male who was suffering from fever.

1:16.7

And to do that, he called a friend of him, Paul Emreze, a surgeon.

1:22.0

Denise and Emreze, introduced from the carotid vein of a lamb blood into the patient

1:29.4

veins, so about nine ounces. At the time of the transfusion, the passion said that he felt stronger

1:38.0

and then he worked and ate normally and was calm and fine.

1:45.0

Thus, this was a success.

1:48.0

The first transfusion to a human was a xenotransfusion and the patient felt well.

...

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