Blood Transfusion
Blood Transfusion
Blood Transfusion
Prof. M.C.Bansal
MBBS., MS., FICOG., MICOG.
Founder Principal & Controller,
Jhalawar Medical College & Hospital Jjalawar.
MGMC & Hospital , sitapura ., Jaipur.
History of Transfusions
• Blood transfused in humans since mid-
1600’s
• 1828 – First successful transfusion
• 1900 – Landsteiner described ABO
groups
• 1916 – First use of blood storage
• 1939 – Levine described the Rh factor
First blood transfusion
• Lower (1665)
First human blood transfusion
Philip (1825)
Discovery of ABO type
Landsteiner
(1900))
Blood Transfusion
Successful blood transfusion is relatively recent
• Crossmatching
• Anticoagulation
WHAT IS ANTIBODYS ?
Antibodies is a protein substance
develop in the body in response to the
presence of an antigen that has
entered the body
Life Saving &
Type of Transfusion:
Whole Blood;
Blood Component;
Plasma Substitutes;
Use of whole blood is considered to be a waste of
resources
DEFINITIONS
BLOOD PRODUCT = Any therapeutic substance prepared from
human blood
WHOLE BLOOD = Unseparated blood collected into an approved
container containing an anticoagulant preservative solution
BLOOD COMPONENT = 1. A constituent of blood , separated
from whole blood such as
• Red cell concentrate
• Plasma
• Platelet concentrates
2. Plasma or platelets collected by apheresis
3. Cryoprecipitate prepared from fresh frozen plasma
Differential Centrifugation
First Centrifugation
Closed System
Platelet-rich
RBC’s Plasma
Differential Centrifugation
Second Centrifugation
RBC’s Platelet-rich
Plasma
Second
Platelet Plasma
RBC’s Concentrate
Whole Blood
• Storage
– 4 for up to 35 days
• Indications
– Massive Blood Loss/Trauma/Exchange Transfusion
• Considerations
– Use filter as platelets and coagulation factors will not be
active after 3-5 days
– Donor and recipient must be ABO identical
Blood Components
THE PRBC
Storage
-2–6OC
Unit of issue
- 1 donation ( unit or pack )
Administration
- ABO & Rh compatible
- Never add medication to a unit
- Complete transfusion within 4 hrs of
commencement
M 1
e
m
Indications
- Acute blood loss with > 20% loss
of blood volume
Trauma
Radiotherapy
Dosage & Administration
(< 50,000)
• Platelet dysfunction
Mild - 50,000-1,00,000/µl
Tx - usually not required
Moderate - 20,000-50,000/µl
Tx-if symptomatic or has to
undergo surgery/trauma
Severe - < 20,000/µl
Risk of bleeding - high
Prophylactic Tx
Plasma and FFP
• Contents—Coagulation Factors (1 unit/ml)
• Storage
– FFP--12 months at –18 degrees or colder
• Indications
– Coagulation Factor deficiency, fibrinogen replacement, DIC, liver
disease, exchange transfusion, massive transfusion
• Considerations
– Plasma should be recipient RBC ABO compatible
– In children, should also be Rh compatible
– Account for time to thaw
– Usual dose is 20 cc/kg to raise coagulation factors approx 20%
Fresh Frozen Plasma (FFP)
Administration - Thawed at
+37o C before transfusion
ABO compatible
Group AB plasma can be used
for all patient
Plasma Substitutes
Dextran
• Most widely used
• Low/Middle M.W. (40,000-70,000)
• Massive transfusion could impair coagulation
• Occasional ALLERGIC reaction
Hydroxyethyl Starch Formulation (HES)
• More stable
• Containing essential electrolytes
• No allergic reaction
--Volume Expander
Granulocyte Transfusions
• Prepared at the time for immediate transfusion (no
storage available)
• Indications – severe neutropenia assoc with infection
that has failed antibiotic therapy, and recovery of BM
is expected
• Donor is given G-CSF and steroids or Hetastarch
• Complications
– Severe allergic reactions
– Can irradiate granulocytes for GVHD prevention
Cryoprecipitate
• Description
– Precipitate formed/collected when FFP is thawed at 4
• Storage
– After collection, refrozen and stored up to 1 year at -18
• Indication
– Fibrinogen deficiency or dysfibrinogenemia
– vonWillebrands Disease
– Factor VIII or XIII deficiency
– DIC (not used alone)(Disseminated intravascular coagulation)
• Considerations
– ABO compatible preferred (but not limiting)
– Usual dose is 1 unit/5-10 kg of recipient body weight
Leukocyte Reduction Filters
• Used for prevention of transfusion reactions
• Filter used with RBC’s, Platelets, FFP, Cryoprecipitate
• Other plasma proteins (albumin, colloid
expanders, factors, etc.) do not need filters—NEVER
use filters with stem cell/bone marrow infusions
• May reduce RBC’s by 5-10%
• Does not prevent Graft Verses Host Disease (GVHD)
RBC Transfusions
Preparations
• Type
– Typing of RBC’s for ABO and Rh are determined for both
donor and recipient
• Screen
– Screen RBC’s for atypical antibodies
– Approx 1-2% of patients have antibodies
• Crossmatch
– Donor cells and recipient serum are mixed and evaluated
for agglutination
RBC Transfusions
Administration
• Dose
– Usual dose of 10 cc/kg infused over 2-4 hours
– Maximum dose 15-20 cc/kg can be given to hemodynamically stable
patient
• Procedure
– May need Premedication (Tylenol )
– Filter use—routinely leukodepleted
– Monitoring—VS q 15 minutes, clinical status
– Do NOT mix with medications
• Complications
– Rapid infusion may result in Pulmonary edema
– Transfusion Reaction
Platelet Transfusions
Preparations
• ABO antigens are present on platelets
– ABO compatible platelets are ideal
– This is not limiting if Platelets indicated and type specific
not available
• Rh antigens are not present on platelets
– Note: a few RBC’s in Platelet unit may sensitize the Rh-
patient
Platelet Transfusions
Administration
• Dose
– May be given as single units or as apheresis units
– Usual dose is approx 4 units/m2—in children using 1-2
apheresis units is ideal
– 1 apheresis unit contains 6-8 Plt units (packs) from a single
donor
• Procedure
– Should be administered over 20-40 minutes
– Filter use
– Premedicate if hx of Transfusion Reaction
• Complications—Transfusion Reaction
Choice of blood group for transfusion
Patient blood first choice second choice
1. O + O+ 0-
2. O- O- -
3. A+ A+ A-,O+,O-
4. A- A- O-
5. B+ B+ B-,O-,O+
6. B- B- O-
7. AB+ AB+ AB+,A+,A-,B+,B-,O-,O+
8. AB- AB- A-,B-,O-,
• Although blood transfusions can be
life-saving, they are not without risks.
The most serious risks are
transfusion reactions and infections.
Transfusion Complications
• Acute Transfusion Reactions (ATR’s)
• Chronic Transfusion Reactions
• Transfusion related infections
Acute Transfusion Reactions
• Hemolytic Reactions (AHTR)
• Febrile Reactions (FNHTR)
• Allergic Reactions
• TRALI(Transfusion related acute lung injury)
• Coagulopathy with Massive transfusions
• Bacteremia
Frequency of Transfusion Reactions
• Repeat crossmatch
• Repeat Blood group typing
• Blood culture
Labs found with AHTR
• Hemoglobinemia
• Hemoglobinuria
• Hyperbilirubinemia
• Abnormal DIC panel
Febrile Nonhemolytic Transfusion
Reactions (FNHTR)
• Definition--Rise in patient temperature >1 C
(associated with transfusion without other fever
precipitating factors)
• Occurs with approx 1% of PRBC transfusions and
approx 20% of Plt transfusions
• FNHTR caused by alloantibodies directed against HLA
antigens
• Need to evaluate for AHTR and infection
Allergic Nonhemolytic Transfusion
Reactions
• Etiology
– May be due to plasma proteins or blood
preservative/anticoagulant
– Best characterized with IgA given to an IgA deficient
patients with anti-IgA antibodies
• Presents with urticaria and wheezing
• Treatment
– Mild reactions—Can be continued after Benadryl
– Severe reactions—Must STOP transfusion and may require
steroids or epinephrine
• Prevention—Premedication (Antihistamines)
TRALI
Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury
• Clinical syndrome similar to ARDS
• Occurs 1-6 hours after receiving plasma-
containing blood products
• Caused by WBC antibodies present in donor
blood that result in pulmonary leukostasis
• Treatment is supportive
• High mortality
Monitoring in AHTR
• Monitor patient clinical status and vital signs
• Monitor renal status (BUN, creatinine)
• Monitor coagulation status (DIC panel–
PT/PTT, fibrinogen, D-
dimer/FDP, Plt, Antithrombin-III)
• Monitor for signs of hemolysis
(LDH, bili, haptoglobin)
Bacterial Contamination
• More common and more severe with platelet
transfusion (platelets are stored at room
temperature)
• Organisms
– Platelets—Gram (+) organisms, ie Staph/Strep
– RBC’s—Yersinia, enterobacter
• Risk increases as blood products age (use
fresh products for immunocompromised)
Chronic Transfusion Reactions
• Alloimmunization
• Transfusion Associated Graft Verses Host
Disease (GVHD)
• Iron Overload
• Transfusion Transmitted Infection
Transfusion Associated Infections
• Hepatitis C
• Hepatitis B
• HIV
• CMV
– CMV can be diminished by leukoreduction, which
is indicated for immunocompromised patients
ABO System & Pregnancy
hemolytic diseases of the newborn may be due to
ABO incompatibility
ABO incompatibility is a common and generally mild
type of haemolytic disease in babies. The term
haemolytic disease means that red blood cells are
broken down more quickly than usual which can
cause jaundice, anaemia and in very severe cases can
cause death. During pregnancy, this breakdown of red
blood cells in the baby may occur if the mother and
baby’s blood types are incompatible and if these
different blood types come into direct contact with
each other and antibodies are formed.
Significant problems with ABO incompatibility
occur mostly with babies whose mothers
have O blood type and where the baby is
either A or B blood type. Premature babies
are much more likely to experience severe
problems from ABO incompatibility, while
healthy full term babies are generally only
mildly affected. Unlike haemolytic disease
that can result in subsequent babies when a
mother has a negative blood group, ABO
incompatibility can occur in first-born babies
and does not become more severe in further
pregnancies
After birth there are two options for testing
for ABO incompatibility:
The cord blood of all babies whose mothers
have an O blood group and the father either
type A or B blood is tested The theory behind
this approach is that if the baby is type A or B
and they test positive in direct antiglobulin
tests (DAT), the baby can then be followed
closely for jaundice.
Free of infection
Fresh
ThAnk You!
Hope you learned
something!