Author: Kevin Dickinson / Source: Big Think
- Fewer than 50 people worldwide have ‘golden blood’ — or Rh-null.
- Blood is considered Rh-null if it lacks all of the 61 possible antigens in the Rh system.
- It’s also very dangerous to live with this blood type, as so few people have it.
Golden blood sounds like the latest in medical quackery.
As in, get a golden blood transfusion to balance your tantric midichlorians and receive a free charcoal ice cream cleanse. Don’t let the New-Agey moniker throw you. Golden blood is actually the nickname for Rh-null, the world’s rarest blood type.As Mosaic reports, the type is so rare that only about 43 people have been reported to have it worldwide, and until 1961, when it was first identified in an Aboriginal Australian woman, doctors assumed embryos with Rh-null blood would simply die in utero.
But what makes Rh-null so rare, and why is it so dangerous to live with? To answer that, we’ll first have to explore why hematologists classify blood types the way they do.
A (brief) bloody history
Our ancestors understood little about blood. Even the most basic of blood knowledge — blood inside the body is good, blood outside is not ideal, too much blood outside is cause for concern — escaped humanity’s grasp for an embarrassing number of centuries.
Absence this knowledge, our ancestors devised less-than-scientific theories as to what blood was, theories that varied wildly across time and culture. To pick just one, the physicians of Shakespeare’s day believed blood to be one of four bodily fluids or “humors” (the others being black bile, yellow bile, and phlegm).
Handed down from ancient Greek physicians, humorism stated that these bodily fluids determined someone’s personality. Blood was considered hot and moist, resulting in a sanguine temperament. The more blood a person had in his system, the more passionate, charismatic, and impulsive he would be. Teenagers were considered to have a natural abundance of blood, and men had more than women.1
Humorism lead to all sorts of poor medical advice. Most famously, Galen of Pergamum used it as the basis for his prescription of bloodletting. Sporting a “when in doubt, let it out” mentality, Galen declared blood the dominant humor, and bloodletting an excellent way to balance the body. 2 Blood’s relation to heat also made it a go-to for fever reduction.
While bloodletting remained common until well into the 19th century,2 William Harvey’s discovery of the circulation of blood in 1628 would put medicine on its path to modern hematology.
Soon after Harvey’s discovery, the earliest blood transfusions were attempted, but it wasn’t until 1665 that first successful transfusion was performed by British physician Richard Lower. 3 Lower’s operation was between dogs, and his success prompted physicians like Jean-Baptiste Denis to try to transfuse blood from animals to humans, a process called xenotransfusion. The death of human patients ultimately led to the practice being outlawed.4
The first successful human-to-human transfusion wouldn’t be performed until 1818, when British obstetrician James Blundell managed it to treat postpartum hemorrhage. 3 But even with a proven technique in place, in the following decades many blood-transfusion patients continued to die mysteriously.
Enter Austrian physician Karl Landsteiner. In 1901 he began his work to classify blood groups. Exploring the work of Leonard Landois — the physiologist who showed that when the red blood cells of one animal are introduced to a different animal’s, they clump together — Landsteiner thought a similar reaction may occur in intra-human transfusions, which would explain why transfusion success was so spotty. In 1909, he classified the A, B, AB, and O blood groups, and for his work he received the 1930 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.5
What causes blood types?
It took us a while to grasp the intricacies of blood, but today, we know that this life-sustaining substance consists of:
- Red blood cells (a.k.a. hemoglobin) — cells that carry oxygen and remove carbon dioxide throughout the body;
- White blood cells (a.k.a. leukocytes) — immune cells that protect the body against infection and foreign agents;
- Platelets — cells…
The post Golden blood: the rarest blood in the world appeared first on FeedBox.