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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2013
ReviewCurrent status of pharmacologic therapies in patient blood management.
- Lawrence Tim Goodnough and Aryeh Shander.
- Pathology Department, Stanford University, 300 Pasteur Drive Room H-1402, M/C 5626 Stanford, CA 94305, USA. ltgoodno@stanford.edu
- Anesth. Analg.. 2013 Jan 1;116(1):15-34.
AbstractPatient blood management(1,2) incorporates patient-centered, evidence-based medical and surgical approaches to improve patient outcomes by relying on the patient's own (autologous) blood rather than allogeneic blood. Particular attention is paid to preemptive measures such as anemia management. The emphasis on the approaches being "patient-centered" is to distinguish them from previous approaches in transfusion medicine, which have been "product-centered" and focused on blood risks, costs, and inventory concerns rather than on patient outcomes. Patient blood management(3) structures its goals by avoiding blood transfusion(4) with effective use of alternatives to allogeneic blood transfusion.(5) These alternatives include autologous blood procurement, preoperative autologous blood donation, acute normovolemic hemodilution, and intra/postoperative red blood cell (RBC) salvage and reinfusion. Reviewed here are the available pharmacologic tools for anemia and blood management: erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs), iron therapy, hemostatic agents, and potentially, artificial oxygen carriers.
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