Can I donate blood for myself, or ask others to donate for me?
Yes, if you are planning elective surgery and are healthy enough to donate blood, you may be able to donate blood for your own use. This is called an autologous donation. Some people planning elective, non–emergency surgery prefer to receive blood donated by relatives, friends or co–workers (directed donations), although there is no evidence these donations are safer than the community blood supply.

What is plateletpheresis?

Although most blood is donated as whole blood, it is also possible to donate only a portion of blood using a technique called apheresis. Blood is drawn from the vein of a donor into an apheresis instrument, which separates the blood into different portions by centrifugation. By appropriately adjusting the instrument, a selected portion of the blood, such as the platelets, can be recovered, while the rest of the blood is returned to the donor either into the same vein or into a vein in the other arm. This process takes more time than whole blood donation, but the yield of platelets is much greater.

Platelets collected by apheresis are particularly useful for patients who require numerous platelet transfusions, for example cancer patients who have received chemotherapy.

What is the Difference Between the Collection of Whole Blood and the Collection of Plasma?
Most of the whole blood collected is separated into components, red blood cells, platelets, plasma and other clotting factors.

Plasma, the fluid in which red blood cells, platelets and other clotting factors are suspended, is collected by apheresis. For this process, whole blood is drawn, plasma is removed and the red blood cells are transfused back into the donor. This plasma collection process takes one to two hours to complete.