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Just For Fun--Blood Bank Quiz Game!


LisaM

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Okay, nobody has asked a question for a while, and so I'll ask a two part question.

What is the latest described Kell antigen, and what has is got to do with seaweed?

:devilish::devilish::devilish::devilish::devilish:

:chainsaw::chainsaw::chainsaw::chainsaw::chainsaw:

I am slain!! I’m aware of no new Kell system antigens after KUCI, KANT, and KASH. I resorted to some googly-ness (is this cheating?!?!) and all I found was an interesting if a bit odd paper detailing the use of immunocytochemistries to elucidate the synthesis and distribution of l- and k- carrageenans in seaweeds. The authors called their anti-k-carrageenan ab “anti-K.”

:confused::confused::cries::cries::confused::confused:

this question after bombing my Donor Center Operations exam. oy.

:shakefist:shakefist

:surrender:surrender:surrender:surrender:surrender

i will now spend the rest of the day contemplating running away and becoming a librarian.

Edited by BrianD
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LOL, devilish question aside, i don't think you'll be called "The Tooting Meadow Torquemada" anytime soon. This is a good one tho'. i'm thinking i might use this question on my assessment test for the new clinical students......a well constructed test MUST have a question that only 1 in 100 students would have a chance of answering. heh heh. tho' if my last crop of them are any indication this question will fall into the 1 in 10,000 interval.

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Right then, the answer is K35, and its trivial name is KELP (hence the comment about seaweed - sorry, my warped sense of humour)!

:bow::bow::bow::bow::bow:

The latest Cromer antigen has the trivial name CROZ.

Why?????????

:plotting::plotting::plotting::plotting::plotting:

prolly because ZENA and CRAM were already taken LOL

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'tis a pity, that. LOL i think blood group serologists want to have as much fun naming things as the fruit fly geneticists did naming the genes they were studying : teashirt, tinman( embryos lack a heart), dreadlocks, cheapdate, lush,Van Gogh (wings have swirly hair patterns), grim reaper, Cleopatra (mutant protein interacts with a protein called Asp and the interaction is lethal), Hamlet(controls the development of the IIb cells in the embryo), gypsy, decapentaplegic, mothers-against-decapentaplegic, daughters-against-decapentaplegic, frizzled, frazzled, Seven-less, Bride-of-Sevenless. it goes on and on. unfortunately, similar mutations have been found in in humans and are associated with awful diseases.

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You are going along the right lines with the fact that the people who named this have a sense of humour.

i think a sense of humor is vital and think an addition that would benefit any clinical training curriculum is something geared toward the development of good humor. i loved how my nurse was baffled when i was checked in for radiation therapy and when completing the questionnaire, my response to "why are you here, today?" was "my hedgehog has gone wonky."

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i think a sense of humor is vital and think an addition that would benefit any clinical training curriculum is something geared toward the development of good humor. i loved how my nurse was baffled when i was checked in for radiation therapy and when completing the questionnaire, my response to "why are you here, today?" was "my hedgehog has gone wonky."

LOVE IT!

:haha::haha::haha::haha::haha:

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Yes, it is a bit of an evil question (hence the devil smilies at the end).

I'm just finishing an on-call duty, then I've got to cook breakfast for the family, wash-up and go to the supermarket for the weekly shop - and then I'll put you out of your misery!!!!!!!!!!

:giggle::giggle::giggle::giggle::giggle::giggle:

What! You have to do all that?! Goodness.

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here's an easy-peasy question to keep the ball rolling:

what is the reason the HLA haplotype: A1,B8,DRB1*0301 is believed to be resistant to recombination AND which blood group antigen cannot be expressed from this particular haplotype.

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here's an easy-peasy question to keep the ball rolling:

what is the reason the HLA haplotype: A1,B8,DRB1*0301 is believed to be resistant to recombination AND which blood group antigen cannot be expressed from this particular haplotype.

So easy-peasy that I haven't got a clue!!!!!!!!

I presume that it has something to do with Ch/Rg as the HLA genes are on Chromosome 6, but that is all I can say?

:confused::confused::confused::confused::confused:

By the way, CROZ was so-called because the propositus came from Australia!

:haha::haha::haha::haha::haha:

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