1 / 33

BLOOD TRANSFUSION

BLOOD TRANSFUSION. Begashaw M (MD). Definition. is the procedure of introducing the blood of a donor, or pre-donated blood by a recipient into the recipient’s bloodstream. I ndications. In acute hemorrhage is based on: • volume lost >2000 • rate of bleeding • hemodynamic status.

tieve
Télécharger la présentation

BLOOD TRANSFUSION

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. BLOOD TRANSFUSION Begashaw M (MD)

  2. Definition • is the procedure of introducing the blood of a donor, or pre-donated blood by a recipient into the recipient’s bloodstream

  3. Indications In acute hemorrhage is based on: • volume lost >2000 • rate of bleeding • hemodynamic status

  4. Indications In Chronic blood loss: -Healthy, younger individuals HCT<21% -Cardio respiratory compromised patients HCT < 25-33% If severe ,even <40%

  5. Perioperative red blood cell transfusion criteria

  6. Component therapy • specific factor deficiencies -factor VIII concentrates -classic hemophilia

  7. ABO blood group system • -Blood group O is the universal donor • -Blood group AB is the universal recipient

  8. Cross matching o Blood grouping -ABO and Rhesus antigens o Antibody screening • Detects atypical red cell antibodies in recipients serum o Crossmatching • Tests donor red cells against patients serum

  9. Blood products • Whole blood • Packed red cells • Granulocyte concentrates • Platelet concentrates • fresh frozen plasma • Plasma protein fraction • Human albumin 25% • Cryoprecipitate • Clotting factors - Factor VIII / IX

  10. Blood Components

  11. Component therapy • Factor VIII for classic hemophilia • Platelet transfusion for patients with bone marrow suppression

  12. preparation

  13. Whole blood • is collected in citrate phosphate dextrose- adenine solution (CPDA-) • 450 ml of whole blood and approximately 60ml of anticoagulant preservative • within 24 hours-freshwhole blood • shelf life of 35 days • one unit of whole blood raises the recipient’s hematocritby 3%

  14. Whole blood

  15. Packed RBC • are remains after plasma has been separated from whole blood • One unit raises the recipient’s hematocrit by 3% • warmed to a temperature not exceeding 37 c before transfusion • Shelf life is 35 days

  16. Packed RBC

  17. Platelet concentrate • Platelets are separated from one unit of blood • may be stored for 3-7 days • One unit of platelet concentrate contains about 5.5×1010 platelets and increases the platelet count by 5000/ml • For a patient with platelet count below 25,000/mm3, 6-8 units are usually given • Platelet concentrate must be administered through a special platelet filter

  18. Fresh frozen plasma _is anti-coagulated plasma separated from a person’s blood and frozen within 6 hours _stored up to 1 year _contains all clotting factors _provides proteins for volume expansion

  19. Cryoprecipitate _is a protein fraction removed from a unit of fresh frozen plasma that is thawed at 4 degree centigrade _white precipitate _shelf life of about 1 year _contains factor VIII, fibrinogen and factor XIII _treatment: -classic hemophilia -DIC

  20. FRESH FROZEN PLASMA

  21. Cryoprecipitate

  22. Protein Albumin - for oncotic support and plasma expansion - disadvantage-rapid excretion & expense Plasma protein fraction -Similar to albumin but contains additional protein molecules

  23. Complications of Blood Transfusion

  24. Complications • Hemolytic transfusion reactions • Non-hemolytic transfusion reaction

  25. Hemolytic transfusion reactions • Intravascular hemolytic transfusion reactions • life threatening reactions • due to incompatibility of the ABO system • are very rare occurring in 1 out of 15,000 -20,000 transfusions

  26. Pathophysiology • all donor cells hemolyze, leading to hemoglobinemia, hemoglobinuriaand renal failure • activate the complement system with subsequent release of vasoacative amines causing hypotension • Complement activation -intravascular thrombosis, DIC & hemorrhage

  27. Clinical features • Patient feels unwell and agitated • back pain and pain at infusion site • shortness of breath, rigors • hypotension, oliguria and bleeding from venepuncture sites • Urinalysis will show haemoglobinuria

  28. Management • Discontinue transfusion immediately and remove giving set • Check unit of blood against patients identity • Give intravenous crystalloid • Transfer to ICU • Take blood for CBC, haemoglobin, clotting, repeat grouping • Monitor urine output

  29. Non-hemolytic transfusion reaction • Febrile reaction: - in 0.5% -1% - is usually treated with antipyretic drugs • Allergic reaction: • in 2-3% • manifests by urticariaand rashes • Antihistamins, steroids or epinephrine

  30. Transmission of disease-include: • Hepatitis • HIV • Malaria • Epstein- bar virus, cytomegalovirus • Brucellosis

  31. Other complications • Citrate toxicity • Acidosis • Hyperkalemia

More Related