Robertson Blood Donor Center blood mobile back in service after long hiatus

FORT CAVAZOS, Texas – The Robertson Blood Donor Center and Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center staff, along with the Mayor of Harker Heights, held a brief ceremony to commission the blood mobile back into service – while it was simultaneously open for a blood drive at the hospital Oct. 10. Having it back and operational will make donating easier for service members, veterans, beneficiaries, and non-beneficiaries. The blood mobile has been nonoperational for the past five years. Maintenance issues with the vehicle delayed its use. The COVID-19 epidemic also delayed repairs. “I can’t thank the staff enough for helping get the blood mobile back online,” said Command Sgt. Maj. Anthony Forker Jr., CRDAMC’s most senior enlisted member. “We can’t do what we do as Soldiers without that (blood) supply.” For Army Medicine there are two centers of gravity, one is the combat medic and the other is blood, he added. According to health.mil, donated blood is used every day at hospitals and clinics worldwide across the Military Health System.The Armed Services Blood Program, also known as the Military Blood Program, is the official military provider of blood products to U.S. armed forces and donations can save service members injured in action, a cancer patient, or family member that needs surgery. A retired military officer himself, Harker Heights Mayor Michael Blomquist added, “I’m happy to be out here to represent our city, be a part of the activities here at Fort Cavazos and support our military.” “I vaguely remember the blood donor center having a bus when I was stationed here,” Blomquist said. “It’s a mobile unit, so it can go where the Soldiers are and allows them to donate without taking off a lot of time during the day.”Although the bus can’t go off post to the communities, it will allow military retirees and active-duty folks that live in our community to come on post to the Exchange, shoppettes, or wherever the bus is to donate, he added. Operated by the Armed Services Blood Program, the RBDC cannot conduct blood drives off post, but local community members who want to conduct a local blood drive can coordinate it through Carter Health Care, according to Ian Wilson, blood donor recruiter, RBDC. “Having the blood mobile back at the RBDC makes it a lot more accessible for us to do blood drives at battalions and allows us to be available to more people in our area, Wilson said. Beneficiaries and nonbeneficiaries are welcome to donate with RBDC, on post. The RBDC is open from 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. weekdays. Those interested in donating can call 254-285-5808 to make an appointment or go directly to the blood center at 2250 West 761st Tank Battalion Avenue.Those unable to donate themselves can contact Wilson at 210-292-8145 to make a difference by organizing blood drives for their unit. Date Taken: 10.10.2023 Date Posted: 10.13.2023 16:00 Story ID: 455759 Location: FORT CAVAZOS, TX, US Web Views: 5 Downloads: 0 PUBLIC DOMAIN This work, Robertson Blood Donor Center blood mobile back in service after long hiatus, by Rodney Jackson, identified by DVIDS, must comply with the restrictions shown on https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright.

Cardiologist explains how to fight high blood pressure, the silent killer

ROANOKE, Va. (WDBJ) – Roughly one in three adults around the world has hypertension, but many don’t know they have it. A recent report by the World Health Organization says 76 million lives could be saved between now and the year 2050 with lifestyle changes and medication. WDBJ7 anchor Jean Jadhon sat down with Carilion Clinic cardiologist Dr. Bryant Self to talk about hypertension and the risks of health problems if it’s left untreated. It’s called the silent killer, but how can you find out if you have it? Dr. Self explains. He also talks about lifestyle modifications that can help hypertension and the medications that are available. Copyright 2023 WDBJ. All rights reserved.

Holland Chick-fil-A holding blood drive for free food

HOLLAND, Mich. (WOOD) — The Chick-fil-A on N Park Drive in Holland is giving customers the chance at some free meals Monday. The fast food franchise has partnered with Versiti Blood Center of Michigan to host a blood drive from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the parking lot of the Chick-fil-A. Those who choose to donate will receive a free chicken sandwich and a digital offer card for a free breakfast entree. “This is a cause that is very close to my heart,” store owner Shaun Page said in a statement. “I’m not sure I would have received the blood supply I desperately needed while battling cancer if it had not been for local donors. A single donation can help as many as three people, so we’re encouraging our community to come out and donate to save lives.” Red Cross: Urgent need for donors amid national blood shortage If you’re interested in donating, you will have to sign up for a spot ahead of time. You can do so by clicking here.

Blood test shows predictive accuracy for high-grade prostate cancer

EV-Fingerprint, a blood-based biomarker test, can accurately predict patients who have grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer and may reduce unnecessary biopsies, according to data published in Cancer Medicine.1 Investigators found that the test was able to predict which patients had grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer with 95% accuracy. According to a news release on the test, “The technology measures levels of prostate cancer biomarkers in a patient’s blood sample, combines that data with their clinical information, then uses machine learning to generate a risk score that predicts the presence of clinically significant prostate cancer.”2 In total, the study of the test included 415 men who were referred for biopsies on the basis of high PSA levels from June 2014 to January 2017 in Alberta, Canada. Of those, 157 (38%) men had a negative biopsy, 258 (62%) received a diagnosis of any prostate cancer, and 73 (18%) were diagnosed with grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer. Investigators found that the test was able to predict which patients had grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer with 95% accuracy (0.81 area under the curve [AUC]). The negative predictive value of the test was 97%. Overall, 144 (35%) patients included in the study could have avoided the recommended biopsy when using a probability cutoff of at least 7.85%. Grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer would have gone undetected in 4 (5%) men. At a risk threshold of at least 5%, 35 (7%) patients could have avoided an unnecessary biopsy, and no grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer would have been missed. “The ClarityDX Prostate test will reduce the number of unnecessary prostate biopsies, which are invasive, uncomfortable, and carry some risk,” stated John D. Lewis, PhD, in a news release.2 Lewis is the Bird Dogs Chair in translational oncology at the University of Alberta, and the CEO of Nanostics Inc, a University of Alberta spinoff company. In comparison with the online risk calculator PCPTRC 2.0 alone, the EV-Fingerprint test demonstrated a greater specificity in predicting grade group 1 or greater disease, with 20% specificity for EV-Fingerprint compared with 15% with PCPTRC 2.0 alone. Both tests showed an AUC of 0.69 and similar negative predictive values. In predicting grade group 2 or greater prostate cancer, EV-Fingerprint demonstrated a greater AUC but a lower specificity and negative predictive value compared with PCPTRC 2.0 alone. Further, prediction of grade group 3 or greater prostate cancer with EV-Fingerprint demonstrated significantly superior AUC (0.81 vs 0.73), specificity (41% vs 24%), and negative predictive value (97% vs 95%) compared with PCPTRC 2.0 alone. The authors note that a larger prospective study is being conducted for clinical validation of the test in a cohort of men from Canada and the US. According to the news release, Nanostics is also currently seeking Health Canada and US FDA approval of the test.2 References 1. Fairey A, Paproski RJ, Pink D, et al. Clinical analysis of EV-Fingerprint to predict grade group 3 and above prostate cancer and avoid prostate biopsy. Cancer Med. 2023;12(15):15797-15808. doi:10.1002/cam4.6216 2. Blood test for prostate cancer could help avoid unnecessary biopsies. News release. University of Alberta. October 5, 2023. Accessed October 15, 2023. https://www.ualberta.ca/folio/2023/10/blood-test-for-prostate-cancer-could-help-avoid-unnecessary-biopsies.html

U.S. cities rally to address Israel’s blood shortage amidst Middle East conflict

JEFFERSON COUNTY, Ohio — In the midst of this war in the Middle East, injuries continue to rise, which is creating a blood shortage. Blood services in Israel are struggling to keep up as hospitals and clinics are just seeing an uptick in patients. The country is so in need, the lobby of Israel’s largest hospital has even become a blood donation center. Now, bigger cities across the U.S., from Cincinnati to Miami are lending a helping hand to aid those struggling to find this healthy supply of blood. So, could we see blood drives for Israel pop up locally? “We are, of course, a part of the international association of Red Cross and it’s a very fluid operation right now,” Sharon Kesselring, with the area Red Cross chapter, said. “We are waiting for some guidance to come out within the next couple of days.” Kesselring said blood shortages are now very common in the U.S., so it may impact any aid. “American Red Cross is very focused on the current need for blood in our own country,” Kesselring said. “We have been in critical appeal since the first of September because of the drastic drop off of donations in august.” Jefferson County Health Commissioner Andrew Henry said, in light of these blood shortages, it brings concern. “When you look at that from an emergency response standpoint, that is very concerning because a key aspect of emergency planning and response is ensuring blood supply for those in need,” Henry said. Henry said seeing an outpouring of donations from nations across the globe is something he hasn’t seen for some time. But he said blood drives for this cause could make their way to the tri-state area. “I don’t know about here in Jefferson County,” Henry said. “Maybe more like Pittsburgh. Your big metropolitan areas are likely to host something like that.”

Washington University test for blood cancers approved by Medicare & Medicaid

Medicare and Medicaid have approved a new test for two blood cancers that was developed by Washington University in St. Louis. Dr. Richard Cote at the School of Medicine said the test advances precision, or personalized, medicine for blood cancer treatment by identifying genetic changes in cancer cells. “This test is a very sophisticated test which essentially looks at the entire genome of the cells that comprise certain types of blood cancers, and specifically those blood cancers are called myeloid blood cancers,” Cote said. Demand for this test is expected to skyrocket across the U.S. now that it’s going to be covered by Medicare and Medicaid. “The point of this test is that, because of the way that it’s done, because it’s actually looking at the entire genome, we believe, and are working on ways to expand the indications for this test, beyond the blood cancers, into other kinds of cancers,” he said. Cote emphasized the importance of the treatment being covered by Medicare and Medicaid, adding that it’s typically a time-consuming process. “We actually got this approved by Medicare relatively rapidly and the reason for that was because of the radical difference it makes in defining the molecular alterations and making treatment decisions in these kinds of cancers,” he explained. He hopes to expand the test to treat other kinds of cancers in the future. Click here for more information. Copyright 2023, Missourinet.

New Synthetic Horseshoe Crab Blood Could Mean Pharma Won’t Bleed the Species Dry

Mass Audubon’s science coordinator Mark Faherty examines a horseshoe crab in Pleasant Bay, where he has conducted research on them for years. John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images If you have ever gotten a vaccine or received an intravenous drug and did not come down with a potentially life-threatening fever, you can thank a horseshoe crab. How can animals that are often called living fossils, because they have barely changed over millions of years, be so important in modern medicine? Blood from horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus) is used to produce a substance called limulus amebocyte lysate, or LAL, which scientists use to test for toxic substances called endotoxins in intravenous drugs. These toxins, produced by bacteria, are ubiquitous in the environment and can’t be removed simply through sterilization. They can cause a reaction historically referred to as “injection fever.” A strong concentration can lead to shock and even death. Identifying LAL as a highly sensitive detector of endotoxins was a 20th-century medical safety breakthrough. Now, however, critics are raising questions about environmental impacts and the process for reviewing and approving synthetic alternatives to horseshoe crab blood. We study science, technology and public policy, and recently published a white paper examining social, political and economic issues associated with using horseshoe crabs to produce LAL. We see this issue as a test case for complicated problems that cut across multiple agencies and require attention to both nature and human health. An ocean solution Doctors began injecting patients with various solutions in the mid-1800s, but it was not until the 1920s that biochemist Florence Seibert discovered that febrile reactions were due to contaminated water in these solutions. She created a method for detecting and removing the substances that caused this reaction, and it became the medical standard in the 1940s. Known as the rabbit pyrogen test, it required scientists to inject intravenous drugs into rabbits, then monitor the animals. A feverish rabbit meant that a batch of drugs was contaminated. The LAL method was discovered by accident. Working with horseshoe crabs at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, in the 1950s and ’60s, pathobiologist Frederik Bang and medical researcher Jack Levin noticed that the animals’ blue blood coagulated in a curious manner. Through a series of experiments, they isolated endotoxin as the coagulant and devised a method for extracting LAL from the blood. This compound would gel or clot nearly instantaneously in the presence of fever-inducing toxins. Academic researchers, biomedical companies and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) refined LAL production and measured it against the rabbit test. By the 1990s, LAL was the FDA-approved method for testing medicines for endotoxin, largely replacing rabbits. Rabbits undergoing a pyrogen test in a laboratory in 1956 to determine a drug’s safety Sherman/Getty Images Producing LAL requires harvesting horseshoe crabs from oceans and beaches, draining up to 30 percent of their blood in a laboratory and returning the live crabs to the ocean. There’s dispute about how many crabs die in the process—estimates range from a few percent to 30 percent or more—and about possible harmful effects on survivors. Today there are five FDA-licensed LAL producers along the U.S. East Coast. The amount of LAL they produce, and its sales value, are proprietary. Bait versus biotech As biomedical LAL production ramped up in the 1990s, so did harvesting horseshoe crabs to use as bait for other species, particularly eel and whelk for foreign seafood markets. Over the past 25 years, hundreds of thousands—and in the early years, millions—of horseshoe crabs have been harvested each year for these purposes. Combined, the two fisheries kill over half a million horseshoe crabs every year. There’s no agreed total population estimate for Limulus, but the most recent federal assessment of horseshoe crab fisheries found the population was neither strongly growing nor declining. Conservationists are worried, and not just about the crabs. Millions of shorebirds migrate along the Atlantic coast, and many stop in spring, when horseshoe crabs spawn on Mid-Atlantic beaches, to feed on the crabs’ eggs. Particularly for red knots—a species that can migrate up to 9,000 miles between the tip of South America and the Canadian Arctic—gorging on horseshoe crab eggs provides a critical energy-rich boost on their grueling journey. Red knots were listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 2015, largely because horseshoe crab fishing threatened this key food source. As biomedical crab harvests came to equal or surpass bait harvests, conservation groups began calling on the LAL industry to find new sources. Biomedical alternatives Many important medicines are derived from living organisms. Penicillin, the first important antibiotic, was originally produced from molds. Other medicines currently in use come from sources including cows, pigs, chickens and fish. The ocean is a promising source for such products. When possible, synthesizing these substances in laboratories—especially widely used medications like insulin—offers many benefits. It’s typically cheaper and more efficient, and it avoids putting species at risk, as well as addressing concerns some patients have about using animal-derived medical products. In the 1990s, researchers at the National University of Singapore invented and patented the first process for creating a synthetic endotoxin-detecting compound using horseshoe crab DNA and recombinant DNA technology. The result, dubbed recombinant Factor C (rFC), mimicked the first step in the three-part cascade reaction that occurs when LAL is exposed to endotoxin. Later, several biomedical firms produced their own versions of rFC and compounds called recombinant Cascade Reagents (rCRs), which reproduce the entire LAL reaction without using horseshoe crab blood. Yet, today, LAL remains the dominant technology for detecting endotoxins in medicine. A sample of horseshoe crab blood Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, CC BY-NC-ND The main reason is that the U.S. Pharmacopeia, a quasi-regulatory organization that sets safety standards for medical products, considers rFC and rCR as “alternative” methods for detecting endotoxins, so they require case-by-case validation for use—a potentially lengthy and expensive process. The FDA generally defers to the U.S. Pharmacopeia. A few large pharmaceutical companies with deep pockets have

Marshall School Hosts Blood Drive

22 minutes ago DULUTH, Minn. –Here’s a story that you’ve heard before, there is a significant blood shortage taking place locally and nationally. The Red Cross and Memorial Blood Bank are both looking for new and past donors to give blood to help alleviate the shortage. At Marshall School in Duluth, the Health and Wellness Club sponsored its first of three blood drives of the year. The school works with Memorial Blood Centers to have its blood mobile on site. According to one of the leaders of the Health and Wellness Club, Elise Sydow, for the most part, everyone who can donate does. The rules say you must be 17 or older to give blood, but if you’re 16 you can donate with a note from your parents. “I’m involved in this because I personally can’t donate,” said Sydow. “I love helping people and me personally and I love helping people. So, because I’m not able to donate blood myself, I like to help others make sure they can.” The Memorial Blood Center has a Duluth location on Burning Tree Road where you can go to donate blood. Red Cross holds mobile blood drives in the area, many times in or near Superior. To find out more about these organizations and where you can give the gift of life, you can visit their website mbc.org or redcrossblood.org

KSR Show, 10/13: Giving blood at Kentucky Branded

Kentucky Sports Radio is on the road on Fridays, and today the show is at Kentucky Branded in Lexington for a blood drive with Kentucky Blood Center. From 10 a.m. to noon, Matt Jones and the guys will be on the air discussing your Kentucky Wildcats from Kentucky Branded’s mall location. While there, fans and listeners can donate blood to help save lives. Blood donors will receive a “Bleed Blue” KSR t-shirt. You can join the conversation by phone at (859) 280-2287. Here on the KSR website, you will find that comments have been disabled on KentuckySportsRadio.com. While we are without the former show threads, listeners can send a text directly to Matt Jones’ phone at (772) 774-5254. Listen to Kentucky Sports Radio MARKET CALL LETTERS DIAL TIME Ashland WCMI 93.3 FM T LIVE Ashland WCMI 1340 AM LIVE Benton WCBL 1290 AM LIVE Bowling Green WKCT 930 AM LIVE Bowling Green WKCT 104.1 FM T LIVE Campbellsville WTCO 1450 AM LIVE Columbia WAIN 1270 AM LIVE Cynthiana WCYN 102.3 FM LIVE Danville WHIR 1230 AM LIVE Elizabethtown WIEL 1400 AM LIVE Elizabethtown WIEL 106.1 FM T LIVE Henderson/Evansville WREF 97.7 FM LIVE Glasgow WCLU 1490 AM LIVE Grayson WGOH 1340 AM LIVE Grayson WGOH 100.9 FM T LIVE Greenup/Ashland WLGC 105.7 FM LIVE Harlan WTUK 105.1 FM LIVE Hopkinsville WHOP 1230 AM LIVE Hopkinsville WHOP 95.3 FM T LIVE Irvine WIRV 1550 AM LIVE Jamestown WJKY 1060 AM LIVE Lancaster WZXI 1280 AM 5-7 PM Lancaster/Stanford WZXI 95.5 FM T 5-7 PM Leitchfield WMTL 870 AM 10A-12N CST Lexington WLAP 630 AM LIVE London WFTG 1400 AM LIVE London WFTG 106.9 FM T LIVE Louisville WKRD 790 AM LIVE Madisonville WFMW 730 AM LIVE Madisonville WFMW 94.9 FM T LIVE Manchester WXXL 1450 AM LIVE Maysville WFTM 1240 AM LIVE McKee-Booneville Peoples Rural Telephone Cable TV Channel 209 LIVE Monticello WKYM 101.7 FM LIVE Morganfield WUCO 1550 AM LIVE Morganfield WUCO 98.5 FM T LIVE Murray WNBS 1340 AM LIVE Owensboro WLME 102.7 FM LIVE Paducah WPAD 1560 AM LIVE Paducah WPAD 99.5 FM T LIVE Paintsville WKYH 600 AM LIVE Pikeville WLSI 900 AM LIVE Pikeville WLSI 95.9 FM T LIVE Prestonsburg WPRT 960 AM LIVE Prestonsburg WPRT 104.5 FM T LIVE Somerset WSFC 1240 AM LIVE Whitesburg WTCW 920 AM LIVE Whitesburg WTCW 95.1 FM T LIVE Whitley City WHAY 98.3 FM LIVE Williamson, WV WBTH 1400 AM LIVE Williamson, WV WBTH 102.5 FM T LIVE 50 Radio Affiliates 37 Markets 1 TV/Cable Affiliate *Affiliates subject to change without notice Join the KSR Club! With a KSR membership, you get access to bonus content and KSBoard, KSR’s message board, to chat with fellow Cats fans and get exclusive scoop.