Blood Transfusion: By: Dr. Hira Hanif
Blood Transfusion: By: Dr. Hira Hanif
Blood Transfusion: By: Dr. Hira Hanif
TRANSFUSION
BY : Dr. HIRA HANIF
TRANSFUSION TEN
COMMANDMENTS
1. Transfusion should only be used when the benefits outweigh
the risks and there are no appropriate alternatives.
2. Results of laboratory tests are not the sole deciding factor for
transfusion.
Pre-transfusion:
■ mention the reason for transfusion, the components to be
transfused and their dose/volume and rate
Informed Consent
• A single informed consent may cover many transfusions if they
are part of a single course of treatment.
During transfusion:
■Details of staff members starting the transfusion.
■Date and time transfusion started and completed.
■Donation number of the blood component.
■Record of observations made before, during and after transfusion.
Post-transfusion:
■Management and outcome of any transfusion reactions or other
adverse events.
Initiating the Transfusion
Immediately before transfusion, mix the unit of blood
thoroughly by gentle inversion.
Flow Rates
Exchange transfusion
contraindications –
chronic anaemia
Warfarin overdose
Signs: Symptoms:
Flushing Anxiety
Urticaria Pruritus
Rigors Palpitations
Fever Milddyspnea
Restlessness Headache
Tachycardia
ACUTE TRANSFUSION REACTION(CONT)
CATIGORY2: IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
1. Stop transfusion
2. Notify the doctor responsible for the patient and
blood bank immediately.
3. Send blood unit with transfusion set and new blood
sample with appropriate request.
4. Administer antihistamine IM(e.g:chlorpheniramine
0.1mg/kg)antipyretic(e.g:paracetamol 10mg/kg)
5. Give IV corticosteroids and bronchodilators if there
are anaphylacoid features(bronchospasm,stridor).
6. Collect urine for next 24hours for evidence of
haemolysis.
7. If no improvement for next 15 minutes ,treat as
category 3.
ACUTE TRANSFUSION REACTION
CATEGORY 3: LIFE-THERATENING REACTIONS
Sign: Symptoms: Possible causes:
Rigors Acute intravascular
Anxiety
Fever Chest pain haemolysis
Restlessness Pain near Bacterial contamination and
Hypotention(fall of infusion site septic shock
>20% of systolic Respiratory Fluid overload
B.P) distress/shortness
Anaphylaxis
Tachycardia(rise of of breath
>20%in heart rate) Loin/back pain Transfusion-associated
Haemoglobinuria Headache acute lung injury(TRALI)
(red urine) dyspnea
Unexplained
bleeding(DIC)
LIFE-THERATENING REACTIONS
IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT(CATEGORY 3)
1. Stop the transfusion
2. Infuse normal saline(initially 20-30ml/kg)to maintain systolic B.P.
3. Maintain airway and give high flow oxygen by mask
4. Give adrenaline(as 1:1000 solution)0.01mg/kg IM
5. Give I V corticosteroids and bronchodilators if there are
anaphylactoid feactures(e.g:bronchospasm, stridor)
6. Give diuretics:e.g;frusemide 1mg/kg IV
7. Send blood unit with infusion set.fresh urine sample and new
blood samples to blood bank for investigations
8. Check a fresh urine specimen visually for sign of
haemoglobinuria.
9. Assess for bleeding from puncture sites or wounds.if there is
clinical or laboratory evidence of DIC,……….give
platelets(adult:5-6 units) and either cryoprecipitate(adult:12
units)or fresh frozen plasma(adult: 3 units)
LIFE-THERATENING REACTIONS
IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT(CATEGORY 3)
10.Reassess if hypotensive:
Give further saline 20-30ml/kg over 5 minutes.
Give inotropic if available.
11.If urine output falling or laboratory evidence of acute
renal failure(rising K+,urea,creatinine):
Maintain fluid balance accurately.
Give further frusemide.
Consider dopamine infusion,if available.
Seek expert help:the patient may need renal dialysis.
12.If bacteramia is suspected(rigor,fever,collapse,no
evidence of a haemolytic reaction)start broad-
spectrum antibiotics IV.
•Conscious patients often become very unwell within the first few
minutes of transfusion, complaining of flushing, loin and
abdominal pain and ‘a feeling of impending doom’.
Tranexamic acid
Tranexamic acid, a synthetic lysine derivative, inhibits
fibrinolysis (the breakdown of blood clots) by reducing the
conversion of plasmin to plasminogen. It is low cost and can be
used by the oral or intravenous route.
Example:
Postpartum haemorrhage (WOMAN trial): 1 g IV followed by a
further 1g if bleeding continues or recurs.
EFFECTIVE
TRANSFUSION IN
SURGERY AND
CRITICAL CARE
ESSENTIALS
1. In the haemodynamically stable, non-bleeding patient
transfusion should only be considered if the Hb is 8.0 g/dL or
less.
4. tranexamic acid
CRASH-2 trial has proven that early administration of tranexamic
acid reduces mortality.
Transfusion in surgery
Preoperative optimisation
acidosis