dialysis
Dialysisdialysis is a machine filtering the body's blood when the organs responsible for natural filtration (kidneys, liver) can not.
The person who works in laboratories taking blood samples is typically called a phlebotomist. Phlebotomists are trained to draw blood for various tests, donations, and transfusions while ensuring the safety and comfort of patients. They often work in hospitals, clinics, and blood donation centers.
Chlamydia is typically detected through urine or swab samples, not blood samples. Blood tests are not commonly used for diagnosing chlamydia.
It is a machine called the dialysis.
low blood surgr!!
Foremost thing that you need to know is that Kidney DOES not pump blood. Heart does. Kidney purifies blood and makes urine. Artificial kidney action is done by a process called dialysis. The machine is generally just called Dialysis machine.
The separation of waste from the blood by filtration through a machine is called dialysis. This process helps to remove excess water, salts, and waste products from the blood when the kidneys are not functioning properly.
The correct sequence when obtaining multiple samples of blood is to collect samples in the following order: blood cultures, non-additive tubes (for serum), tubes with additives (e.g., EDTA, heparin, citrate), and finally, blood samples for coagulation studies. This sequence ensures that samples are not contaminated by additives from other tubes and prevents cross-contamination.
Samples may include stool sample, blood sample, or other samples.
The removal of wastes from blood using a machine is called hemodialysis. This process involves filtering the blood through a dialyzer to remove waste products and excess fluids, mimicking the function of the kidneys in patients with kidney failure.
A pooled blood product is a collection of multiple donated blood samples in order to test 10 samples at a time to see whether the blood tests positive or negative for certain diseases. If negative, then the cost of testing the other 9 samples has been saved!