Morgan and Mikhail's Clinical Anesthesiology Chapter 51

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TABLE 51–5 Average blood volumes.

Age Blood Volume (ml/kg)
Neonate (premature) 95
Neonate (full term) 90
infants 80
Adult men 75
Adult women 65
  1. Estimate blood volume from Table 51–5.
  2. Estimate the red blood cell volume (RBCV) at the preoperative hematocrit (RBCVpreop). volume is maintained.
  3. Estimate RBCV at a hematocrit of 30% (RBCV30%), assuming normal blood
  4. Calculate the RBCV lost when the hematocrit is 30%; RBCVlost = RBCVpreop – RBCV30%.
  5. Allowable blood loss = RBCVlost × 3. (Page 4)

Example: An 85-kg woman has a preoperative hematocrit of 35%. How much blood loss will decrease her hematocrit to 30%?

Estimated blood volume = 65ml/kg x 85kg = 5525ml
RBCV35% = 5525 x 35% = 1934ml
RBCV30% = 5525 x 30% = 1658ml
Red cell loss at 30% = 1934 - 1658 = 276ml
allowable blood loss = 3 x 276ml = 828ml

Therefore, transfusion should be considered only when this patient’s blood loss exceeds 800 mL. Increasingly, transfusions are not recommended until the hematocrit decreases to 24% or lower (hemoglobin <8.0 g/dL), but it is necessary to take into account the potential for further blood loss, rate of blood loss, and comorbid conditions (eg, cardiac disease). Clinical guidelines for transfusion commonly used include the following:

  1. transfusing 1 unit of ../../../Knowledge/Medicine/Red Blood Cell will increase ../../../Knowledge/Medicine/Haemoglobin 1 g/dL and the hematocrit 2% to 3% in adults; and
  2. a 10-mL/kg transfusion of red blood cells will increase hemoglobin concentration by 3 g/dL and the hematocrit by 10%.

Almost all individuals not having A or B antigen “naturally” produce antibodies, mainly immunoglobulin (Ig) M, against those missing antigens within the first year of life. (Page 6)

A crossmatch mimics the transfusion: Donor red cells are mixed with recipient serum.

Crossmatching serves three functions:

  1. it confirms ABO and Rh typing,
  2. it detects antibodies to the other blood group systems, and
  3. it detects antibodies in low titers or those that do not agglutinate easily.

Type & Crossmatch versus Type & Screen

In the situation of negative antibody screen without crossmatch, the incidence of serious hemolytic reaction with ABO- and Rh-compatible transfusion is less than 1:10,000. Crossmatching, however, assures optimal safety and detects the presence of less common antibodies not usually tested for in a screen. Because of the expense and time involved (45 min), crossmatches are often now performed before the need to transfuse only when the patient’s antibody screen is positive, when the probability of transfusion is high, or when the patient is considered at risk for alloimmunization.

EMERGENCY TRANSFUSIONS

When a patient is exsanguinating, the urgent need to transfuse may arise prior to completion of a crossmatch, screen, or even blood typing. If the patient’s blood type is known, an abbreviated crossmatch, requiring less than 5 min, will confirm ABO compatibility. If the recipient’s blood type and Rh status are not known with certainty and transfusion must be started before determination, type O Rh-negative (universal donor) red cells may be used. Red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and platelets are often transfused in a balanced ratio (1:1:1) in massive transfusion protocols and in trauma damage control resuscitation

Acute Hemolytic Reactions

Acute intravascular hemolysis is usually due to ABO blood incompatibility, and the reported frequency is approximately 1:38,000 transfusions. The most common cause is misidentification of a patient, blood specimen, or transfusion unit, a risk that is not abolished with autologous blood transfusion. These reactions are often severe, and may occur after infusion of as little as 10 to 15 mL of ABO-incompatible blood. The risk of a fatal hemolytic reaction is about 1 in 100,000 transfusions. In awake patients, symptoms include chills, fever, nausea, and chest and flank pain. acute hemolytic reaction may be manifested by a rise in temperature, unexplained tachycardia, hypotension, hemoglobinuria, diffuse oozing in In anesthetized patients, an (Page 12)

the surgical field, or a combination of these findings. Disseminated intravascular coagulation, shock, and kidney acute failure can develop rapidly. The severity of a reaction often depends upon the volume of incompatible blood that has been administered.

Management of hemolytic reactions can be summarized as follows:

  1. If a hemolytic reaction is suspected, the transfusion should be stopped immediately and the blood bank should be notified.
  2. The unit should be rechecked against the blood slip and the patient’s identity bracelet.
  3. Blood should be drawn to identify hemoglobin in plasma, to repeat compatibility testing, and to obtain coagulation studies and a platelet count.
  4. A urinary bladder catheter should be inserted, and the urine should be checked for hemoglobin.
  5. Forced diuresis should be initiated with mannitol and intravenous fluids, and with a loop diuretic if necessary.

AUTOLOGOUS TRANSFUSION

Morgan and Mikhail's Clinical Anesthesiology Chapter 51

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