Difference between revisions of "Timeline of hematology"
From Timelines
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| 1925 || Field development || American pediatrician {{w|Thomas Benton Cooley}} describes a Mediterranean hematologic syndrome of anemia, {{w|erythroblastosis}}, skeletal disorders, and splenomegaly that is later called Cooley’s anemia and now {{w|thalassemia}}.<ref name="The History of Hematology and Related Sciences"/> || | | 1925 || Field development || American pediatrician {{w|Thomas Benton Cooley}} describes a Mediterranean hematologic syndrome of anemia, {{w|erythroblastosis}}, skeletal disorders, and splenomegaly that is later called Cooley’s anemia and now {{w|thalassemia}}.<ref name="The History of Hematology and Related Sciences"/> || | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | 1927 || Field development || The [[w:P antigen system|P blood group system]] is discovered.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rudmann |first1=Sally V. |title=Textbook of Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine |url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=dXdISwJQJFIC&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96&dq=Globoside+group+system+%22in+1900..2017%22&source=bl&ots=xjxTr1tPXp&sig=fXKERd_MjRQn1_b3loXnO3KqHeo&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjRgMi3zPzdAhXDD5AKHRkKAB4Q6AEwAHoECAgQAQ#v=onepage&q=Globoside%20group%20system%20%22in%201900..2017%22&f=false}}</ref> || | + | | 1927 || Field development || The [[w:P antigen system|P blood group system]] is discovered.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rudmann |first1=Sally V. |title=Textbook of Blood Banking and Transfusion Medicine |url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=dXdISwJQJFIC&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96&dq=Globoside+group+system+%22in+1900..2017%22&source=bl&ots=xjxTr1tPXp&sig=fXKERd_MjRQn1_b3loXnO3KqHeo&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjRgMi3zPzdAhXDD5AKHRkKAB4Q6AEwAHoECAgQAQ#v=onepage&q=Globoside%20group%20system%20%22in%201900..2017%22&f=false}}</ref> It is considered among the major blood group systems.<ref name="OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS"/> || |
|- | |- | ||
| 1927 || Organization || The French Society of Hematology is formed. It is the first hematology organization in the world.<ref name="Hematology in Japan: past, present and future"/> || {{w|France}} | | 1927 || Organization || The French Society of Hematology is formed. It is the first hematology organization in the world.<ref name="Hematology in Japan: past, present and future"/> || {{w|France}} | ||
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| 1927 || Literature || Journal La Sang is released in {{w|France}}.<ref name="Hematology in Japan: past, present and future"/> || {{w|France}} | | 1927 || Literature || Journal La Sang is released in {{w|France}}.<ref name="Hematology in Japan: past, present and future"/> || {{w|France}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | 1927 || Field development || {{w|Karl Landsteiner}} and {{w|Philip Levine}} discover the {{w|MNS antigen system}}, after immunizing {{w|rabbit}}s with human {{w|red blood cell}}s.<ref name="APC Essentials of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology"/> || | + | | 1927 || Field development || {{w|Karl Landsteiner}} and {{w|Philip Levine}} discover the {{w|MNS antigen system}}, after immunizing {{w|rabbit}}s with human {{w|red blood cell}}s.<ref name="APC Essentials of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology"/> It is considered among the major blood group systems.<ref name="OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS"/> || |
|- | |- | ||
| 1932 || Field development || A simple method of measuring the volume and {{w|hemoglobin}} is introduced.<ref name="Hematologyvv"/> || | | 1932 || Field development || A simple method of measuring the volume and {{w|hemoglobin}} is introduced.<ref name="Hematologyvv"/> || | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| 1946 || Literature || Journal ''[[w:Blood (journal)|Blood]]'' is established by {{w|William Dameshek}}.<ref>{{cite web |title=About Blood |url=http://www.bloodjournal.org/page/about-blood?sso-checked=true |website=bloodjournal.org |accessdate=20 September 2018}}</ref> || | | 1946 || Literature || Journal ''[[w:Blood (journal)|Blood]]'' is established by {{w|William Dameshek}}.<ref>{{cite web |title=About Blood |url=http://www.bloodjournal.org/page/about-blood?sso-checked=true |website=bloodjournal.org |accessdate=20 September 2018}}</ref> || | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | 1946–1948 || Field development || The {{w|Lewis blood group system}} is identified. It is considered among the major blood group systems.<ref name="OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS">{{cite web |title=OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS |url=https://www.slideshare.net/ferdiefatiga/other-blood-group-systems |website=slideshare.net |accessdate=21 October 2018}}</ref> Consisting in antigens Le{{sup|a}} and Le{{sup|b}}, the second reaches a frequency of 70 percent in Europeans.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lewis blood group system |url=https://www.britannica.com/science/Lewis-blood-group-system |website=britannica.com |accessdate=21 October 2018}}</ref> || | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1946 || Field development || Austro-Hungarian biochemist {{w|Erwin Chargaff}} and Randolph West discover that platelet-free plasma exhibits clotting properties.<ref name="=On the origin of microparticles: From “platelet dust” to mediators of intercellular communication"/> || | | 1946 || Field development || Austro-Hungarian biochemist {{w|Erwin Chargaff}} and Randolph West discover that platelet-free plasma exhibits clotting properties.<ref name="=On the origin of microparticles: From “platelet dust” to mediators of intercellular communication"/> || | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | 1946 || Field development || The [[w:Kell antigen system|Kell blood group system]] is discovered.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kell blood group system |url=https://www.britannica.com/science/Kell-blood-group-system |website=britannica.com |accessdate=10 October 2018}}</ref> || | + | | 1946 || Field development || The [[w:Kell antigen system|Kell blood group system]] is discovered.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kell blood group system |url=https://www.britannica.com/science/Kell-blood-group-system |website=britannica.com |accessdate=10 October 2018}}</ref> It is considered among the major blood group systems.<ref name="OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS"/> || |
|- | |- | ||
| 1947 || Field development || Lerner and Watson introduce the term "{{w|cryoglobulin}}", demonstrating the reversibility of the phenomenon when the sera are heated to 37°C.<ref name="Oxford Textbook of Vasculitis"/> || | | 1947 || Field development || Lerner and Watson introduce the term "{{w|cryoglobulin}}", demonstrating the reversibility of the phenomenon when the sera are heated to 37°C.<ref name="Oxford Textbook of Vasculitis"/> || | ||
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| 1950 || Organization || The {{w|Society for Hematology and Stem Cells}} is founded by a group of scientists for the presentation and discussion of experimental hematology pre-clinical data.<ref>{{cite web |title=Society for Hematology and Stem Cells |url=https://www.omicsonline.org/societies/society-for-hematology-and-stem-cells/ |website=omicsonline.org |accessdate=10 September 2018}}</ref> || | | 1950 || Organization || The {{w|Society for Hematology and Stem Cells}} is founded by a group of scientists for the presentation and discussion of experimental hematology pre-clinical data.<ref>{{cite web |title=Society for Hematology and Stem Cells |url=https://www.omicsonline.org/societies/society-for-hematology-and-stem-cells/ |website=omicsonline.org |accessdate=10 September 2018}}</ref> || | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | 1950 || Field development || The {{w|Duffy antigen system}} is discovered.<ref name="APC Essentials of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology"/> || | + | | 1950 || Field development || The {{w|Duffy antigen system}} is discovered.<ref name="APC Essentials of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology"/> It is considered among the major blood group systems.<ref name="OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS"/> || |
|- | |- | ||
− | | 1951 || Field development || The [[W:Kidd antigen system|Kidd blood group system]] is discovered.<ref>{{cite book |title=Blood: Physiology and Circulation |edition=Kara Rogers Senior Editor, Biomedical Sciences |url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=iObZwlOu1mMC&pg=PA106&lpg=PA106&dq=Diego+antigen+system+in+1940..1980&source=bl&ots=aHUPunj1aG&sig=9qoLdXfpfZx6z4bFwC7h5_LCIh4&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj1vNa0pfzdAhXCE5AKHVnGDi0Q6AEwAHoECAQQAQ#v=onepage&q=Diego%20antigen%20system%20in%201940..1980&f=false}}</ref> || | + | | 1951 || Field development || The [[W:Kidd antigen system|Kidd blood group system]] is discovered.<ref>{{cite book |title=Blood: Physiology and Circulation |edition=Kara Rogers Senior Editor, Biomedical Sciences |url=https://books.google.com.ar/books?id=iObZwlOu1mMC&pg=PA106&lpg=PA106&dq=Diego+antigen+system+in+1940..1980&source=bl&ots=aHUPunj1aG&sig=9qoLdXfpfZx6z4bFwC7h5_LCIh4&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj1vNa0pfzdAhXCE5AKHVnGDi0Q6AEwAHoECAQQAQ#v=onepage&q=Diego%20antigen%20system%20in%201940..1980&f=false}}</ref> It is considered among the major blood group systems.<ref name="OTHER BLOOD GROUP SYSTEMS"/> || |
|- | |- | ||
| 1952 || Field development || {{w|Hh blood group}} (also known as Oh or the Bombay blood group) is first discovered in {{w|Bombay}} (Mumbai), India.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Chapter 6The Hh blood group |url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2268/}}</ref> || {{w|India}} | | 1952 || Field development || {{w|Hh blood group}} (also known as Oh or the Bombay blood group) is first discovered in {{w|Bombay}} (Mumbai), India.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Chapter 6The Hh blood group |url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2268/}}</ref> || {{w|India}} |
Revision as of 18:19, 20 October 2018
This is a timeline of hematology, listing important events in the development of the field. Events related to transfusion are described in the Timeline of transfusion medicine.
Contents
Big picture
Time period | Development summary |
---|---|
Ancient history | “Blood letting” instruments are used in Ancient Egypt.[1] |
17th century | Dutch microscopist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, using a primitive, single-lens microscope, already observes red blood cells (erythrocytes) and compared their size with that of a grain of sand.[2] |
18th century | English physiologist William Hewson is considered to be the "father of hematology". Hewson manages to amplify the description of red cells and demonstrates the role of fibrin in the clotting (coagulation) of blood.[3][2] |
19th century | Bone marrow is recognized as the site of blood-cell formation in the 19th century, along with the first clinical descriptions of pernicious anemia, leukemia, and a number of other disorders of the blood.[2] |
20th century | The discovery by Karl Landsteiner of the ABO blood group system in the first quarter of the 20th century makes possible the transfusion of blood from one person to another without the serious ill effects that ensue when incompatible blood is given. The study of the blood disease anemia gains impetus from the introduction of the hematocrit, an apparatus for determining the volume of red blood cells as compared with the volume of plasma, and the introduction in 1932 of a simple method of measuring the volume and hemoglobin. After World War II, the field of hematology broadens.[2] In the 1950s, plastic intra venous tubing replaces rubber tubing.[4][1] The 1960s is the decade in which most of the modern understanding of platelet funcion is initiated.[5] In the 1970s, the combination of several observational studies identifying a possible role for prophylactic platelet transfusion in hypoproliferative thrombocytopenia and the discovery that platelets are best stored at room temperature with gentle agitation to preserve function allow for the proliferation of platelet transfusions as part of standard management of patients receiving chemotherapy.[6] In the 1980s, the emergence of HIV renews impetus for development of infection-safe blood substitutes.[7] |
Full timeline
Year | Event type | Details | Location |
---|---|---|---|
3255 BC | The oldest intact red blood cells ever discovered are found in Ötzi, a natural mummy of a man who died around that time.[8] | ||
460 BC – 377 BC | Field development | Greek physician Hippocrates teaches the humoral theory, a hypothetical system to explain illness in which balance equals health, and excess or deficiency equals illness.[1] | Greece |
1616 | Field development | English physician William Harvey discovers blood pathways. Since then many people try to use fluids such as beer, urine, milk, and non-human animal blood as blood substitute.[9] | United Kingdom |
1628 | Field development | English physician William Harvey publishes Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis in Animalibus (Movement of the Heart and the Blood in Animals), which demonstrates the concept of blood circulation.[5] | United Kingdom |
1642 | Scientific development | Dutch scientist Antonie van Leeuwenhoek constructs a microscope and distinguishes blood cells.[1] | Netherlands |
1656 | Field development | English anatomist Christopher Wren gives the first intravenous injection in animals.[1] | United Kingdom |
1658 | Field development | Dutch biologist Jan Swammerdam first describes red blood cells by means of the use of an early microscope to study the blood of a frog. | |
1662 | Field development | J. C. Major gives the first intravenous injection in humans.[1] | |
1665 | Field development | English physician Richard Lower performs the first documented blood transfusion using dogs and notes a color difference between veins and arteries.[6][1] | United Kingdom |
1666 | Field development | Italian physician Marcello Malpighi notices that fiber filaments remain in a blood clot after it is thoroughly washed.[10] | Italy |
1667 | Field development | French physician Jean-Baptiste Denys and Richard Lower separately report giving the first human blood transfusion with blood fromlambs. Within 10 years, transfusing the blood of animals to humans becomes prohibited by law, delaying transfusion advances for about 150 years.[1] | France, United Kingdom |
1674 | Field development | Pioneer microscopist Anton van Leeuwenhoek writes his own description of human red blood cells.[11] | Netherlands |
1675 | Field development | Anton van Leeuwenhoek makes the remarkable discovery that "those sanguineous globules in a healthy body must be very flexible and pliant, if they are to pass through the small capillary veins and arteries, and that in their passage they change into an oval figure, reassuming their roundness when they come into a larger room."[11] | Netherlands |
1770 | Field development | British surgeon William Hewson describes leukocytes and some essential clottingfactors. Hewson becomes known as “the father of hematology.”[1] | |
1771 | Literature | William Hewson publishes Experimental Inquiry into the Properties of the Blood.[5] | United Kingdom |
1795 | Field development | American physician Philip Syng Physick claims to perform the first human-to-human blood transfusion, although he does not publish this information.[1] | |
1821 – 1902 | Field development | German physician Rudolf Virchow disproves a prominent view that phlebitis (inflammation of a vein) causes most diseases. Virchow demonstrates that masses in the blood vessels result from “thrombosis” (his term) and that portions of a thrombus could become detached to form an “embolus” (also his term).[12] | Germany |
1827 | Literature | amateur British opticist Joseph Jackson Lister and fellow Quaker Dr Thomas Hodgkin publish Notice of some Microscopic Observations of the Blood and Animal Tissues.[5] | United Kingdom |
1830 | Instrumental | The gold-plated steel needle for intravenous use is invented.[4] | |
1840 | Field development | English surgeon Samuel Armstrong Lane performs the first successful whole blood transfusion to treat hemophilia.[13][14][15][16] | United Kingdom |
1840s | Field development | English anatomist George Gulliver publishes early illustrations of platelets.[5] | United Kingdom |
1842 | Field development | French microscopist Alexandre Donné identifies platelets.[17][18] | |
1867 | Field development | British surgeon Joseph Lister uses antiseptics to control infection during transfusions.[1] | United Kingdom |
1875 | Field development | Zahn reports that an injured blood vessel is eventually plugged by a fibrin-associated white thrombus. This observation leads to the discovery that platelets are responsible for contributing fibrin in the blood coagulation process.[10] | |
1877 | Field development | German-Jewish physician Paul Ehrlich develops techniques to stain blood cells to improve microscopic visualization.[19] | Germany |
1882 | Field development | Italian medical researcher Giulio Bizzozero describes blood platelets.[20][5] | Italy |
1897 | Literature | American pediatrician Luther Emmett Holt publishes The Diseases of Infancy and Childhood, which includes a 20-page chapter on diseases of the blood and is the first American pediatric medical textbook to provide significant hematologic information.[19][21] | United States |
1901 | Field development | Austrian biologist Karl Landsteiner and his associates discover the ABO blood group system, and define the different blood groups: A, B, AB, and O. Such names refer to the different kinds of antigens on the surface of the red blood cell.[22][23][24][25] | |
1902 | Field development | Alfred Decastello and Adriano Sturli add bloodtype AB to the classification system.[26] | |
1904 | Literature | Folia Haematologica is established in Germany. It is the first hematology journal in the world.[27] | Germany |
1906 | Field development | James Wright describes the bone marrow and megakaryocyte origin of platelets.[5] | |
1907 | Field development | American pathologist Ludvig Hektoen from Chicago, explains the significance of isoagglutinins in human blood and how the untoward reactions are related to them.[28][19] | United States |
1908 | Field development | American haematologist Reuben Ottenberg develops clinical methods for typing bloods.[28] | United States |
1910 | Field development | Sickle cell disease is first described.[29] | |
1910 | Field development | Duke notes that transfusions reduce the bleeding time. After this, transfusions become recognized as successful therapeutic hemostatic intervensions.[6] | |
1914 | Field development | American scientist, Richard Lewisohn, discovers that sodium citrate can be added to blood to stop it clotting.[30][25][19] | |
1918 | Field development | The use of blood plasma as a substitute for whole blood and for transfusion purposes is proposed by Gordon R. Ward. The use of blood plasma as a substitute for whole blood and for transfusion purposes was proposed in the same year, in the correspondence columns of the British Medical Journal. | United Kingdom |
1920 | Field development | The investigation of the role of food substances in the production of red blood cells is launched. It would lead to discovery of the beneficial effects of liver extract in treating pernicious anemia and ultimately to the discovery of vitamin B12, the anti-anemic principle of liver.[2] | |
1920 | Literature | Journal Haematologica is first published.[31][32] It is the second in the world to be released.[27] | Italy |
1924 | Literature | Pediatrics becomes the first comprehensive American publication on pediatric hematology.[19] | |
1925 | Field development | Canadian physician Alfred P. Hart introduces exsanguination ("exchange") transfusion to treat severe neonatal jaundice.[33][34][35][19] | |
1925 | Field development | American pediatrician Thomas Benton Cooley describes a Mediterranean hematologic syndrome of anemia, erythroblastosis, skeletal disorders, and splenomegaly that is later called Cooley’s anemia and now thalassemia.[19] | |
1927 | Field development | The P blood group system is discovered.[36] It is considered among the major blood group systems.[37] | |
1927 | Organization | The French Society of Hematology is formed. It is the first hematology organization in the world.[27] | France |
1927 | Literature | Journal La Sang is released in France.[27] | France |
1927 | Field development | Karl Landsteiner and Philip Levine discover the MNS antigen system, after immunizing rabbits with human red blood cells.[38] It is considered among the major blood group systems.[37] | |
1932 | Field development | A simple method of measuring the volume and hemoglobin is introduced.[2] | |
1933 | Field development | The formation of cryoprecipitate is first observed in relation to a patient with multiple myeloma.[39] | |
1935 | Field development | Danish biochemist Carl Peter Henrik Dam finds that bleeding in chicks that developed an excessive bleeding disorder in response to synthetic diets, do not occur if their synthetic chow was replaced with one fortified with a specific vitamin. Dam labels this antihemorrhagic agent “vitamin K” and establishes its essential role in normal blood coagulation.[10] | Denmark |
1936 | Organization | The World's first blood bank opens in Chicago.[40][41][25] | United States |
1936 | Field development | American hematologist John H. Lawrence of the University of California, Berkeley introduces phosphorus-32 for the treatment of leukemia.[42][43][44] | United States |
1937 | Organization | The Japanese Society of Hematology (JSH) is founded in Kyoto. It is the second hematology organization in the world.[45][27] | Japan |
1937 | Field development | Karl Landsteiner and Alexander S. Wiener identify the Rh factor (an abbreviation of "Rhesus factor") in blood.[13] | |
1938 | Literature | Journal Acta Haematologica Japonica is established. In 1991, it would be renamed International Journal of Hematology.[27] | Japan |
1938 | Field development | American pediatricians {Louis Diamond (known as the “father of American pediatric hematology”) and Kenneth Blackfan describe the anemia still known as Diamond-Blackfan anemia.[19] | United States |
1941 | Literature | Blackfan, Diamond, and Leister publish The Atlas of the Blood of Children.[19] | |
1945 | Field development | Robin Coombs, Arthur Mourant and Rob Race describe the use of antihuman globulin (later known as the “Coombs Test”) to identify “incomplete” antibodies.[19] | |
1946 | Literature | Journal Blood is established by William Dameshek.[46] | |
1946–1948 | Field development | The Lewis blood group system is identified. It is considered among the major blood group systems.[37] Consisting in antigens Lea and Leb, the second reaches a frequency of 70 percent in Europeans.[47] | |
1946 | Field development | Austro-Hungarian biochemist Erwin Chargaff and Randolph West discover that platelet-free plasma exhibits clotting properties.[10] | |
1946 | Field development | The Kell blood group system is discovered.[48] It is considered among the major blood group systems.[37] | |
1947 | Field development | Lerner and Watson introduce the term "cryoglobulin", demonstrating the reversibility of the phenomenon when the sera are heated to 37°C.[39] | |
1947 | Field development | Australian serologist Ruth Ann Sanger and Robert Russell Race identify the S and s genes.[26] | |
1950s | Instrumental | The “butterfly” needle and intercath are developed, making intravenous access easier and safer.[19] | |
1950 | Organization | The Society for Hematology and Stem Cells is founded by a group of scientists for the presentation and discussion of experimental hematology pre-clinical data.[49] | |
1950 | Field development | The Duffy antigen system is discovered.[38] It is considered among the major blood group systems.[37] | |
1951 | Field development | The Kidd blood group system is discovered.[50] It is considered among the major blood group systems.[37] | |
1952 | Field development | Hh blood group (also known as Oh or the Bombay blood group) is first discovered in Bombay (Mumbai), India.[51] | India |
1954 | Field development | The blood product cryoprecipitate is developed to treat bleeds in people with hemophilia.[19] | |
1954 | Field development | Peterman and Braunsteiner report cryoprecipitates of immunoglobulins with different sedimentation rates, thus introducing the concept of "mixed cryoglobulinaemia".[39] | |
1955 | Literature | The British Journal of Haematology is launched.[52][53] | United Kingdom |
1955 | Field development | The Diego antigen system is discovered.[38] | Venezuela |
1958 | Organization | The American Society of Hematology is founded.[54][55] | United States |
1959 | Field development | Austrian-born British molecular biologist Max Perutz uses X-ray crystallography to determine the overall structure of hemoglobin.[56][57][58][59] | |
1959 | Organization | The Japanese Society of Clinical Hematology is established in Tokyo.[27] | Japan |
1960 | Organization | The British Society for Haematology is founded.[60] | United Kingdom |
1960 | Field development | The Gerbich blood group system is discovered.[61] | |
1961 | Field development | Researchers identify role of platelets in treating cancer patients.[62][25] | |
1962 | Field development | At an International Committee on Blood Clotting Factors conference in Stockholm, English hematologist Robert Gwyn Macfarlane of Oxford and American researcher Oscar Ratnoff propose that the coagulation process involves an enzyme acting on its substrate to make it an active enzyme, which subsequently acts on its own distinct substrate. This type of enzymatic activation continues down a line of substrates before coagulation is achieved.[10] | Sweden |
1962 | Field development | The Xg antigen system is discovered by Mann in the serum of a multiply transfused male.[61] | |
1962 | Field development | The first antihemophilic factor concentrate to treat coagulation disorders in hemophilia patients is developed through fractionation.[19] | |
1962 | Field development | Researchers at CSL Behring develop a new plasma fractionation method that provides significantly better yields of the valuable proteins isolated from human plasma.[63] | |
1962 | Field development | Platelet transfusion begins to be used more routinely, especially in cancer patients when the relationship between thrombocytopenia and hemorrage is noted.[6] | |
1965 | Field development | The Cromer blood group system is discovered.[61] | |
1965 | Field development | The first antibody of the Dombrock system is identified.[64] | |
1967 | Field development | Peter Wolf first identifies microparticles as a product of platelets.[10] | |
1967 | Field development | The Colton blood group system is identified.[65] | |
1968 | Field development | Rh immune globulin (RhIg) is first licensed as a human plasma-derived product consisting of IgG antibodies to the D antigen. It is used to prevent immunization to the D antigen in D-negative individuals and for the treatment of immune thrombocytopenia (ITP).[66] | |
1970 | Field development | Webber and Johnson find that platelet alpha granule contents are encompassed into vesicles, which come together to form a membrane complex at the surface of the platelet.[10] | |
1972 | Literature | Journal Experimental Hematology is launched by the International Society for Experimental Hematology, incorporated the same year as the continuation of the Society for Hematology and Stem Cells.[67] | |
1974 | Literature | Davis Nathan and Stuart Oski publish Hematology of Infancy and Childhood.[19] | |
1974 | Field development | The Scianna blood group system is established.[68] | |
1975 | Literature | Journal Blood Cells, Molecules and Diseases is established.[69] | |
1976 | Literature | The American Journal of Hematology is established.[70] | United States |
1977 | Field development | Kitamura first observes that mast cells are derived from hematopoietic stem cells shown by transplantation of bone marrow cells from mutant mice.[27] | Japan |
1977 | Field development | Miyake et al first purify erythropoietin.[27] | Japan |
1978 | Field development | The Duclos antigen is identified.[71] | |
1970s | Field development | Alan T. Nurden, Jacques P. Caen, David R. Phillips, and others describe the molecular basis of platelet aggregation.[20] | |
1980 | Field development | The ISBT Working Party on Terminology for Red Cell Surface Antigens is established with the goal of creating a uniform nomenclature.[61] | |
1980 | Field development | Molecular biology is applied to the study of blood groups.[72] | |
1981 | Organization | The American Society of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology is founded.[73][74] | United States |
1983 | Field development | Doctors in France and the United States discover the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).[25] | United States, France |
1986 | Field development | Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor is cloned independently in Japan.[27] | Japan |
1986 | Field development | The [[wikipedia:Ola antigen|Ola antigen]] is identified.[71] A rare blood group antigen, Only one Ola+ person was found among the 7, 151 blood donors tested.[75] | |
1987 | Literature | Journal Blood Reviews is established.[76] | |
1990s | Field development | Recombinant factor replacement products are used to treat hemophilia.[25] | |
1990 | Field development | The Er blood group collection is established as a blood group.[77] | |
1990 | Literature | Peer-reviewed medical journal Platelets is first issued.[78] | |
1991 | Field development | The Knops blood group system is established.[61] | |
1992 | Organization | The International Society for Laboratory Hematology is founded by an international group of laboratory professionals in order to chart new directions for laboratory hematology.[79] | |
1992 | Organization | The European Hematology Association is founded in Brussels.[80] | Belgium |
1994 | Field development | Researchers investigating the effects of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulation on monocyte procoagulant activity, reveal that the microparticles released by stimulated human monocytes possess more tissue factor activity than their parent monocytes.[10] | |
2002 | Field development | The GIL blood group system is established.[81] It is designated as system 29.[82] | |
2008 | Literature | Journal Expert Review of Hematology is released.[83] | |
2008 | Literature | The Open Hematology Journal is released.[84] | |
2008 | Field development | The RHAg (Rh-associated glycoprotein) is established as a blood group system.[71] | |
2011 | Field development | The FORS blood group system is established as the 31st blood group system.[85][86] |
Meta information on the timeline
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See also
External links
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 "Timeline of Major Hematology Landmarks". scribd.com. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Hematology". britannica.com. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
- ↑ Doyle, D. "William Hewson (1739-74): the father of haematology.". PMID 16643443. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2141.2006.06037.x.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Vincent, Jean-Louis; Abraham, Edward; Kochanek, Patrick; Moore, Frederick A.; Fink, Mitchell P. Textbook of Critical Care E-Book.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Books on Google Play Platelets in Thrombotic and Non-Thrombotic Disorders: Pathophysiology, Pharmacology and Therapeutics: an Update (Paolo Gresele, Neal S. Kleiman, José A. Lopez, Clive P. Page ed.).
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Platelets in Thrombotic and Non-Thrombotic Disorders: Pathophysiology, Pharmacology and Therapeutics: an Update (Paolo Gresele, Neal S. Kleiman, José A. Lopez, Clive P. Page ed.).
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