Cord Blood Facts Home

Cord Blood Basics
What is Cord Blood
Why Store Cord Blood
Pros & Cons
Cord Blood Advantages
Obtaining Cord Blood
Collection Practices
Collection Risks

Cord Blood Banking
Cord Blood Banking
Cord Blood Procssing
Storing Cord Blood
Storage Time
Types of Banks
Banking Guidelines
Banking Costs
Cord Blood Donations

Stem Cell Research
What are Stem Cells
Types of Stem Cells
Obtaining Stem Cells
Stem Cell Uses
Disease Treatment
Stem Cell Controversy
Stem Cells & Cloning

Other Reading
What is GVHD
What is HLA Matching
Christopher Reeve

Obtaining Cord Blood

Cord Blood is a rich source of stem cells as Bone Marrow, but it is very easy to attain as compared to bone marrow. The collection process is comparatively easy and painless, and does not interfere with the delivery or subsequent care for your newborn and yourself.

Immediately after delivery of the baby, the umbilical cord is clamped and the baby is separated from the cord. Your obstetrician or midwife cleans a 4-to 8-inch area of umbilical cord with antiseptic solution and inserts the blood bag needle into one of the three veins in the umbilical cord. The blood flows into the bag by gravity, until it stops, after which the collection is complete.

The blood bag is clamped, sealed and labeled. The collection typically takes 2 to 5 minutes. Three tubes of maternal blood are also drawn. After a successful collection about 75 to 90 ml (less than 1/2 a cup) of cord blood is collected. This quantity is about 10 times less than is usually used for a bone marrow transplant.

The bag comes equipped with an anti-coagulant to keep the blood from clotting before it reaches to the concerned laboratory. The process is non-invasive, painless, and unlike traditional bone marrow collection which usually requires a general anesthesia and recovery, generally takes between three and five minutes to complete. In many cases patients are supplied with a cord blood collection kit prior to delivery date (to bring along with them) to the hospital for the physician or midwife to collect the cord blood after delivery.

When the placenta is expelled, more blood will be collected from the veins in the placenta. After the placenta is out of the womb. The cord blood collection may not be successful because the volume collected is insufficient or there is a clot. If unsuccessful, there will be no need to collect blood from you or take a medical history.

The minimum requirement of cord blood sample is 100g. The main goal when collecting cord blood is to collect the maximum number of hematopoietic progenitor cells possible (while in no way disrupting the normal activities of the obstetrician or midwife in the peripartum period). The number of stem cells is important to the success of the transplant. The transplant recipient's time to neutrophil recovery is strongly correlated with the dose of cryo-preserved nucleated cells, CFU-GM and the dose of thawed CD34+ cells.

On average, about three to five fluid ounces are collected from the umbilical cord. If the amount is too small, there will not be enough stem cells to be used for transplantation and the cord blood unit (CBU) will not be stored. CBUs that do not meet the criteria for transplant may be used by researchers in the search for new and more effective medical uses for cord blood stem cells.

Cord blood can be collected from the placenta either while the placenta is still in utero after the cord is clamped and cut and the baby is removed from the area, or after the placenta has been delivered, referred to as ex utero. Most in utero collections occur in a closed system using blood collection bags to minimize the risk of contamination.

In ex utero collections, the cord blood is collected after the placenta has been delivered and has been moved to a location outside the delivery room. To collect the blood, the surface of the umbilical cord is disinfected and the umbilical vein is punctured. The blood can be collected by gravity drainage into a prepared blood bag or it can be drawn into a 60 cc syringe containing an anticoagulant. The collection can be completed within 3-5 minutes. A delay of more than 10-15 minutes could result in a decreased volume of cord blood and a decreased number of hematopoietic cells.