29 May,2024 04:36 PM IST | Indore | mid-day online correspondent
Ravindra Ashtekar receives certificate after donating blood of a very rare `Bombay` group at a hospital in Indore on Wednesday. Pic/ PTI
Ravindra Ashtekar with the rare 'Bombay' blood group travelled from Shirdi in Maharashtra to Madhya Pradesh to help save the life of a 30-year-old woman who was critically ill, reported PTI.
Ashtekar, 36, runs a wholesale flower business in Shirdi. He reached Indore on May 25 and donated blood to the woman, admitted to a hospital there following which her condition has improved, said the PTI report.
"When I came to know about the critical condition of this woman through a group of blood donors on WhatsApp, I left for Indore in a friend's car, travelling about 440 kilometres. I obviously feel good because I could make some contribution from my side in saving the woman's life," Ashtekar told PTI on Tuesday.
He said in the last 10 years, he has donated blood to the needy patients eight times in Maharashtra as well as in different cities of Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.
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Dr Ashok Yadav, head of the transfusion medicine department at the government-run Maharaja Yeshwantrao Hospital in Indore, on Tuesday told PTI that the woman had been accidentally administered 'O' positive group blood during an operation for an obstetric ailment in another hospital.
Due to this, her condition deteriorated and kidneys were also affected, he said.
"When the woman was sent to Roberts Nursing Home in Indore after her condition deteriorated, her haemoglobin level had fallen to around 4 grams per decilitre, whereas the haemoglobin level of a healthy woman should be 12 to 15 grams per decilitre," he said.
After being administered four units of 'Bombay' blood, the woman's condition has become better, reported PTI citing Yadav.
If the woman was not given blood of this rare group on time, her life could have been endangered, he said.
Ashok Nayak, head of the blood call centre at Indore's social organisation Damodar Yuva Sangathan, helped in the collection of 'Bombay' group blood for the woman patient.
Two units of blood of this group were transported by air from Nagpur to Indore for the woman, and her sister also donated one unit of blood in Indore, Nayak said.
'Bombay' blood group, said to be discovered in 1952, is rare in which there is the absence of H antigen and presence of anti-H antibodies. Patients carrying this blood can receive transfusion only from a person from within this group.