Transfusion
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The transfusion of red cells (RBCs) was analyzed over a 4-year period (1984-1987), during which 9596 cesarean deliveries were performed. A total of 336 patients were identified as receiving RBC transfusions during or after cesarean delivery; 747 units of RBCs were administered. The overall incidence of transfusion in this patient population declined from 6.2 to 3.2 percent during the study period (p less than 0.001). ⋯ The most common obstetric diagnoses associated with RBC transfusion were disorders of placental implantation, preeclampsia, premature labor with tocolytic therapy, fetal distress, and augmentation of dysfunctional labor. In patients without risk factors for bleeding, there was no trend indicating increased transfusion requirements when general anesthesia was employed. In conclusion, this study documents a decline in the transfusion rate during cesarean delivery.
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The effectiveness of the confidential unit exclusion (CUE) procedure recommended by the Food and Drug Administration has been questioned by the blood banking community. The purpose of this study was to determine whether donors were informing the blood center correctly regarding the disposition (transfuse or do not transfuse) of their donated blood. A letter explaining the confidential study and requesting permission to send the participant a questionnaire noting his or her self-exclusion choice was mailed to 230 donors who had chosen transfuse and 276 donors who had chosen do not transfuse. ⋯ A seven-word terminology quiz made up of words from the CUE form was also enclosed. All participants who had chosen transfuse indicated that this was the correct choice. Approximately 50 percent of those who had chosen do not transfuse indicated that this was an incorrect choice; the most common reason was that "I was not paying attention." The most frequently misunderstood term was "confidential." Donors who chose do not transfuse had a significantly higher rate of error on the terminology quiz (p less than 0.01) than did those who chose transfuse.
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The American Association of Blood Banks (AABB) requires that blood samples used for pretransfusion testing of recently transfused (or pregnant) patients must be obtained within 3 days of scheduled transfusions. This requirement, which became effective in July 1988, amended Standard G2.000 of the AABB, which previously required that pretransfusion testing must be done on blood samples obtained within 2 days of scheduled transfusions. The present study was designed to estimate the risk associated with adopting the amended version of Standard G2.000. ⋯ Thirteen of the 60 patients were found to have newly detectable antibodies within 83 hours of a sample reported to be negative for the new antibody. Had the amended version of Standard G2.000 been in effect, the detection of some of these antibodies might have been delayed up to 24 hours. It was estimated that the implementation of the new AABB requirement at the authors' institution could potentially place about 1 in 3000 transfused patients at risk for an acute or delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction.
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The risks of transfusion-associated infectious disease have led to a reassessment of transfusion practice, which in turn has resulted in a trend toward the reduction of homologous transfusion. This reduction is primarily due to the initiation of hemotherapy at more severe levels of anemia. The optimum threshold for the initiation of transfusion therapy, or the transfusion trigger (TT), is unknown. ⋯ Oxygen delivery fell after ET (18.9 vs. 11.1 cc/kg/min, p less than 0.001), but there was no significant change in oxygen consumption after ET. The unanesthetized animals adapted well to severe anemia and experienced no adverse effects on their long-term survival in this setting, which suggests that the reduction of the TT to a Hct of 15 percent in normal animals is safe. Adoption of this TT could result in a significant reduction in the requirements for homologous transfusion with its attendant risks.