488 
HEMATOLOGY 
16. MOOR-JANKOWSKI, J. and Wiener, A. S.: Red cell 
antigens of primates; in Fiennes Pathology of 
simian primates, Part I, pp. 270-317, Karger Basel, 
1972. 
17. Wiener, A. S. and Moor-Jankowski, J.: Blood 
groups of nonhuman primates and their relation- 
ship to the blood groups of man; in Chiarelli Com- 
parative genetics in primates pp. 71-95, Academic 
Press, London/New York, 1971. 
18. Tung, K. S., Deadhar, S. D. and Nakamoto, S.: 
The effect of A-B-0 blood group incompatibility on 
renal transplantation in man. Annual Meeting of 
the American Society of Clinical Pathologists, 
Chicago, 111., 1967. 
19. Hume, D. M., Gaylb, W. S. and Williams, G. M. : 
Cross-circulation of patients in hepatic coma with 
baboon partners having human blood. Surg. Gyn. 
Obstet., 128:495, 1969. 
20. Goldsmith, E. I., Moor-Jankowski, J., Wiener, 
A. S.; Allen, P. H. and Hirsch, R. : Exchange 
transfusion of nonhuman primates with human 
blood. A program for preparation of cross-circu- 
lation partners in hepatic failure. Medical Prima- 
tology, pp. 80-91, 1970, Edited by E. I. Goldsmith 
and J. Moor-Jankowski. Karger, Basel/New York, 
1971. 
DISCUSSION 
C. J. Stormont, University of California, 
Davis, Calif. : Dr. Moor-Jankowski, v^^here do 
you and Dr. Wiener do your work? Is Dr. 
Wiener doing most of the work at his own lab- 
oratory, or do you both work at the medical 
school ? 
Dr. Moor-Jankowski : In the medical school. 
Dr. Wiener receives NIH support for his large 
laboratory at New York University Medical 
Center devoted specifically to typing of non- 
human primates. In addition, we have the 
Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Sur- 
gery in Primates, sponsored by Associated Medi- 
cal Schools of Greater New York. If anybody is 
interested in preservation of red cells, I pre- 
sume we are the only laboratory in the world 
with methods and possibilities for liquid freez- 
ing, i.e., freezing primate red cells in liquid 
nitrogen. 
Dr. Stormont: You were talking about the 
complete interchange of blood between chim- 
panzees and man. Have you heard of any re- 
cent experiment where lower animal species' 
blood has been used to transfuse man? For an 
example. Dr. Wiener and Dr. Unger had one 
patient, an aged lady, who had auto-immune 
hemolytic disease. Finally she couldn't tolerate 
human blood and had developed antibodies for 
practically every antigen system known in man. 
As a last resort, they asked me to ship them 
some cattle blood from a healthy animal im- 
mediately. I sent them some and they trans- 
fused her with the blood. It kept her alive eight 
weeks beyond her expected death time. 
Dr. Moor-Jankowski: I haven't heard of 
this, which is quite interesting because I work 
so closely with Dr. Wiener. In light of what is 
being done now with non-human primates, I 
think this should be published. 
