Overview on Blood Transfusion-Transmitted Diseases
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17762/jaz.v44iS-5.1520Keywords:
Blood transfusion, transfusion transmitted infections, transfusion transmitted viral diseases, bacteria, parasite, safety, prevention.Abstract
As it is important for the Blood transfusion to be extremely safe, some measures have to be taken long safeguarded the blood supply from the major transfusion transmissible diseases (TTIs). The risk of transfusion-transmitted infection (TTI) rises with the number of donors exposed, and the effects of TTI are frequently more severe in immune compromised people. TTIs (hepatitis B virus [HBV], HIV, and hepatitis C virus [HCV]) are examples of typical transfusion-transmitted infectious agents. As a result of the gradual application of nucleic acid-amplification technology (NAT) screening for HIV, HCV, and HBV, the residual risk of infected window-period donations has been minimized. Nonetheless, infections emerge far more frequently than is commonly acknowledged, needing ongoing surveillance and individual assessment of transfusion-associated risk. Although there is a constant need to monitor present dangers owing to established TTI, the ongoing issues in blood safety are mostly related to surveillance for developing agents, as well as the creation of quick reaction systems when such agents are detected.
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Copyright (c) 2023 Mohammed Salah Hussain, Qahtani, Saad Hussain, Abeer Ali M Alsubhi, Ahmed Maashi Helal Alanazi, Douaa Elnail Abdelbagi, Khalid Hamad Al Hattab, Wala Hassan Khalafalla Abdelfadeel, Wesal Ali Aljohani, Shama Mousa Albalawi, Kholod Khaled Alsubhi, Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Alomran, Aldoseri, Huda Amer A, Tahani Saleh A Alsaery

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