Transfusion
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The incidence of blood transfusion in coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery remains high. Preoperative identification of those at high risk for requiring blood will allow for the cost-effective use of some blood conservation modalities. Multivariable analysis techniques were used in this study to develop a prediction rule for such a purpose. ⋯ A simple and valid prediction rule is developed for predicting the risk of blood transfusion in patients undergoing first-time elective CABG surgery.
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Half of the reported serious adverse events from transfusion are a consequence of medical error. A no-fault medical-event reporting system for transfusion medicine (MERS-TM) was developed to capture and analyze both near-miss and actual transfusion-related errors. ⋯ The MERS-TM allowed the recognition and analysis of errors, determination of patterns of errors, and monitoring for changes in frequency after corrective action was implemented. Although no permanent injury resulted from the 819 events, innovative mechanisms must be designed to prevent these errors, instead of relying on faulty informal checks to capture errors after they occur.
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Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is a serious, sometimes fatal, complication of transfusion. Granulocyte and HLA class I antibodies present in blood donors have been associated with TRALI. HLA class II antibodies have recently been described in a few cases of TRALI. ⋯ In addition to HLA class I antibodies, HLA class II antibodies are associated with TRALI. Testing of donors for HLA class II antibodies as well as HLA class I and granulocyte antibodies is recommended as part of the investigation of suspected cases of TRALI.
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Oxygen-carrying solutions are intended to eliminate the blood transfusion trigger. Their ability to maintain microvascular perfusion and to deliver oxygen to tissue when they replace the RBCs as oxygen carriers has not been directly measured. ⋯ Using PBH solution to replace RBC oxygen-carrying capacity during low Hb content conditions (<50%) causes abnormally low tissue oxygenation and FCD, while the same level of hemodilution with dextran maintains normal microvascular conditions.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Prospective RBC phenotype matching in a stroke-prevention trial in sickle cell anemia: a multicenter transfusion trial.
Most sickle cell anemia patients undergo transfusion therapy to prevent complications. The Stroke Prevention Trial in Sickle Cell Anemia showed that transfusion therapy is effective in the primary prevention of stroke. Despite its efficacy, transfusion therapy is limited by alloimmunization. The purpose of this study was to determine if a multicenter trial could implement a transfusion program utilizing phenotypically matched blood to reduce alloimmunization. ⋯ This is the first multicenter study to show that extended RBC phenotyping can be implemented nationwide. Compared to studies, the alloimmunization rate dropped from 3 percent to 0.5 percent per unit, and hemolytic transfusion reactions dropped by 90 percent. It is recommended that all transfused sickle cell anemia patients be antigen matched for E, C, and Kell. Patients should be closely monitored during transfusions to avoid preventable risks.