1 / 24

INDICATIONS FOR EMERGENT TRANSFUSIONS

INDICATIONS FOR EMERGENT TRANSFUSIONS. Manjushree Matadial DO Saint Joseph Hospital and Medical Center, April 27,2009. Red Blood Cells. Indications Hemoglobin less than 7.0 g/dl in the absence of coronary disease or ischemia

dougal
Download Presentation

INDICATIONS FOR EMERGENT TRANSFUSIONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INDICATIONS FOR EMERGENT TRANSFUSIONS Manjushree Matadial DO Saint Joseph Hospital and Medical Center, April 27,2009

  2. Red Blood Cells • Indications • Hemoglobin less than 7.0 g/dl in the absence of coronary disease or ischemia • Hemoglobin less than 7.0 g/dl during surgery associated with major blood loss or impaired oxygen transport • Hemoglobin less than 8.0 g/dl in patients with chronic transfusion regimen or during marrow suppressive therapy

  3. Red Blood Cells • Hemoglobin less than 10.0 g/dl in select populations ie. Neonates, coronary disease or cerebrovascular disease • Age less than 40 with Hct = 24 • Age 40 – 60 with Hct = 27 • Age 60 – 70 with Hct = 30

  4. Pathophysiology • Consequences of Anemia • Increased cardiac output when Hgb < 7.0 g/dl in acute situations • Not the case in chronic anemia has been compensated • Increased oxygen extraction systematically at the capillary level

  5. Pathophysiology • Decreased hemoglobin decreases the oxygen delivery and the oxygen extraction ratio increases which maintains a constant oxygen uptake into the tissues • A hemoglobin below 3.0 g/dl increases the lactic acidosis

  6. Blood Products • Type and Screen • Determines the ABO and Rh status and the presence of antibodies • Takes anywhere from 5 mins – 30 mins • Risk of adverse reaction is 1: 1000 • Type O red cells are mixed with the patient’s serum

  7. Blood Products • Type and Cross • Determines ABO and Rh status as wells as adverse reactions to low incidence antigens—risk of reaction is 1 : 10,000 • Takes 60 mins • Type O red cells are mixed with the patient’s serum and the donor red cells are then mixed with the patient’s serum to determine incompatibility

  8. Transfusions • Type specific crossmatch • Type specific uncrossmatch • Type O Rh(-) used emergently

  9. Donor O A B AB Recipient O, A, B, AB A, AB B, AB AB Transfusions

  10. Blood Products • Whole blood • Contains 510 ml • PRBC’s • Prepared by centrifuging whole blood and removing 250 ml of plasma supernatant • Each unit of PRBC contains 200 ml of erythrocytes and 50 – 100 ml of plasma and CPD solution • The concentration of hemoglobin is 23-27 g/dl • 10 ml/kg will increase HCT by 10%

  11. Blood Products • Leukocyte-Poor Red Cells • Used in transfusing patients that are febrile • Patients with a history of non-hemolytic transfusion reactions (caused by antibodies to leukocytes in donor blood) • Transplant recipients or candidates • Patients requiring CMV (-) transfusions

  12. Blood Products • Washed Red Cells • These are packed cells washed with isotonic saline to remove leukocytes and residual plasma • The removal of plasma prevents allergic reactions caused by prior sensitization to plasma proteins in donor blood • Is to be used in patients with hypersensitivity reactions

  13. Blood Products • CMV (-) Blood • CMV infects many tissues ie. Blood, kidney, lung , liver and brain • Following patients are susceptible to transfusion-transmitted CMV primary infections and disease therfore they should receive CMV (-) blood

  14. Blood Products • CMV (-) Blood • Low birth weight neonates < 1200 grams • CMV seronegative pregnant women • CMV seronegative recipients of , or candidates for bone marrow or peripheral blood cell transplants • CMV seronegative HIV (+) patients

  15. Blood Products • CMV seronegative recipients of, or candidates for solid organ transplants • CMV PCR screening tool • A large portion of CMV seronegative donors are CMV PCR positive

  16. Blood Products • Irradiated • Prevents graft versus host disease in the immune compromised patients • Gamma irradiation eliminates the ability of lymphocytes to proliferate and preventing them from mounting and immune response to the host tissue

  17. Blood Products • Bone marrow and stem cell transplant recipients • Congenital T cell immunodeficiency syndromes: SCIDS, Wiskott-Aldrich, DiGeorge • Intrauterine transfusion • Neonatal exchannge transfusion

  18. Blood Products • Irradiated Cells • Premature neonates < 1200 grams • Transfusions from blood relatives • Patients with hematologic malignancies: ie.Hodgkin’s, Non-Hodgkin’s and acute leukemia and neuroblastoma

  19. Platelet Therapy • Indications for transfusions • Platelets < 10, 000 with no risk factor • Active bleeding • Bone marrow failure • Platelets < 20, 000 with the following risk factors: febrile, bleeding, ICH, antibiotic therapy

  20. Platelet Therapy • Indications • Surgery with a high risk of bleeding or an invasive procedure • Endoscopy with biopsy • Lumbar puncture • Surgical intervention

  21. Platelet Therapy • Indications • Platelet function defects ie CABG (maintain the platelets > 50, 000) • Bleeding/ massive transfusion (maintain the platelets > 100, 000 ) • Ie. DIC or CNS trauma

  22. Platelet Transfusion • Prepared by centrifuging fresh whole blood and suspending the supernatant pellet in a small volume • 1 unit of whole blood has 50 – 100 billion platelets in 50 ml of plasma • Stored up to 7 days • Effectiveness declines after 3 days • Transfused in (6-10 ) units at a time

  23. Cyropprecipitate Useage • Replaced in the following manner (5-10 ml/kg) • Replaces VIII (Hemophilia A), factor XIII, fibrinogen, fibronectin, and vWF • Used also in DIC and Trauma

  24. Fresh Frozen Plasma • Indications • Used in life threatening bleeding in patients on coumadin • Liver disease if bleeding with abnormal coagulation profile • Acute DIC • Following massive transfusions or CABG

More Related