Title: Blood Component Transfusion
1Blood Component Transfusion
2Blood Transfusions
- As an anesthesiologist in the OR, you are
directly responsible for - Saving a patients life with blood
- Adverse events that may occur with transfusion
3Available Blood Components
- Packed Red Blood Cells (PRBCs)
- Whole Blood (on PMH 3rd floor)
- Fresh Frozen/Thawed Plasma
- Platelets
- Cryoprecipitate
4Why Transfuse?
- Patients tissues are starved of oxygen (from low
hemoglobin)need red blood cells - Patients blood wont clotneed platelets or
coagulation factors
5Oxygen Delivery
- Arterial O2 content
- 1.34(Hbg)(sat) 0.008 pAO2
6Packed Red Blood Cells
- One unit 300-350cc volume with HCT 55-60
- Stored at 1-6C for up to 35 days
- Once at room temperature, must be used within 4
hours - Each unit raises hemoglobin by 1 g/dL, HCT by 3
7PRBCs Indications
- Research shows
- In patients without cardiovascular disease,
hemoglobin values 7 g/dL are safe - In the patient experiencing the Acute Coronary
Event, hemoglobin should be kept above 10 g.
8PRBCs The Gray Area
- Patients with cardiovascular disease but without
active ischemia--conflicting evidence regarding
threshold for transfusion
9PRBCs The Gray Area
- The 70-year old blind dialysis-dependent double
amputee diabetic, hemodynamically unstable,
undergoing a Whipple, hemoglobin of 9? - TRANSFUSE
10PRBCs The Gray Area
- The 55 yo, stable angina, railroad track vitals
during ankle ORIF, hemoglobin of 8? - Hold off on giving blood (but why is their
hemoglobin that low?)
11PRBCs Other Considerations
- Free flaps--need healthy blood supply
- Sickle Cell Disease--red cells dont work well
- Burn patients--higher O2 requirements
- Neurosurgical patients in vasospasm--balance O2
delivery and blood viscosity
12PRBCs Official PHHS Guidelines
- Hypovolemia due to blood loss
- gt20 fall in BP
- HR gt100
- EBL gt1000cc or 15 patients blood volume
- Oliguria
- Orthostatic BP/HR changes
13PRBCs Bottom Line
- Treat the patient, not the number
- Take into account past medical history, starting
H/H, hemodynamic stability, and the rate of blood
loss
14Whole Blood
- Contains clotting factors along with RBCs
- Some decrease in levels of factors V and VIII
with time, but these are still usually adequate - Platelets are inactivated by cold storage
15Whole Blood
- Only available on 3rd floor (OB), only in types O
and A - About 450cc, HCT 40-45
- Transfusion indications similar to those for
PRBCs
16Thawed Plasma/Fresh Frozen Plasma
- Consists of donated plasma after removal of RBCs
- Volume about 250cc
- Contains all clotting factors
- At PMH, plasma is not stored frozen, so factor
VIII levels are decreased
17Plasma Transfusion Indications
- Patient is bleeding and has a clotting factor
deficiency (INR 1.6) or coagulopathy of
Uncertain Origin - Reversal of warfarin in emergencies
- TTP with plasmapheresis
- Heparin resistance
18Plasma Transfusion--Nonindications
- Volume expansion (without coagulopathy)--use
crystalloid/albumin - Heparin reversal--use protamine
- Isolated factor deficiencies or vonWillebrand
disease - Patient is not bleeding
19Plasma Transfusion in the Non-bleeding Patient
- If the patient isnt bleeding and wont have a
reason to (ie, not pre-op) - Take a deep breath
- Try some vitamin K
- Think about diagnosis
20Platelets
- Come either pooled (from several people donating
whole units of blood) or from single donor
(apheresis platelets) - Each bag of 250cc raises count by 25-50K
- Kept at room temperature
21Platelet Transfusion
- Platelets are in short supply, so use is
restricted - Prophylaxis lt10K
- Most invasive procedures and/or bleeding patient
lt50K - Invasive procedure/bleeding and dysfunctional
platelets lt100K - Neurosurgery lt100K
22Cryoprecipitate
- When FFP is thawed, some plasma components
precipitate - Each bag is 10 pooled units and is about
150cc - Kept at room temperature
- Contains fibrinogen, factors VIII and XIII and vWF
23Cryoprecipitate Transfusion Indications
- Low (lt100 mg/dL) or dysfunctional fibrinogen with
bleeding or patient needing procedure - vonWillebrand disease
- Uremic bleeding (if DDAVP doesnt work)
- t-PA reversal
24Adjuncts to Transfusion
- DDAVP and factor concentrates
- Factor concentrates are expensive, but have
advantages - Useful in specific factor deficiencies
- Do not contribute to volume overload
25Desmopressin
- AKA DDAVP
- Synthetic analogue of vasopressin
- Causes endothelial cell release of factor VIII
and vWF, enhances platelet function in uremia - Can use in Jehovahs Witnesses
26Prothrombin Complex Concentrate
- PCC, Profilnine
- Virally-inactivated pooled plasma product
- Contains factors II, VII, IX, and X
- For warfarin reversal--expensive, but low-volume,
low risk of reactions
27Prothrombin Complex Concentrate
- Has been associated with arterial and venous
thrombosis - Unlike FFP, does not contain proteins C and S
- Included in Trauma Coumadin Protocol here at
Parkland
28Factor VII Concentrate
- NovoSeven
- Recombinant Factor VIIa
- Very expensive
- Used for massive trauma, head bleeds, cardiac
surgery - OK for JWs
29Artificial Oxygen Carriers
- Not blood products
- Hemoglobin or perfluorocarbon-based molecules
- None approved for use in the US
30Complications of Transfusion
- Infection
- Transfusion reactions
- Volume overload
- Immunosuppression
31Infectious Complications
- Hepatitis B 1200,000
- HIV and HCV 12,000,000
- HTLV I and II 13,000,000
- CMV 1-17
- Leukoreduction nearly eliminates this risk
32Infectious Complications
- Bacterial
- Most common with platelets since they are never
refrigerated (and often pooled) - Incidence as high as 0.1
- Can cause sepsis (most commonly staph/strep)
- All platelet donations are now routinely screened
for bacteria
33Transfusion Reactions
- Acute hemolytic reactions
- Rare, but life-threatening
- Usually ABO incompatibilities between donor and
patient due to human error - Pre-existing antibodies cause massive
inflammatory response and hemolysis
34Acute Hemolytic Reactions
- Cytokine response--hypotension, tachycardia,
fever, DIC - Hemolysis--hemoglobinuria and possible renal
failure - May result in total hemodynamic collapse
35Acute Hemolytic Reactions
- Incidence about 177,000
- Stop transfusion immediately if suspected
- Supportive treatment
- Primary prevention--check all blood products
36Delayed Hemolytic Reactions
- Patient has antibodies to more minor RBC antigens
(Rh, Kell, Kidd, Lewis, etc) from prior exposure - Hematocrit starts falling 5-10 days after
transfusion - May have symptoms, but rarely severe or
life-threatening
37Febrile Nonhemolytic Reaction
- Increase of gt1C within one hour following
transfusion - Usually from reaction of recipient HLA antibodies
with donor leukocytes - Risk increases with pooled products (platelets),
decreases with leukoreduction - Treat symptomatically--can be severe
38Allergic Reactions
- Common, up to 3 of plasma infusions
- IgE antibodies to proteins in donors plasma
- Usually urticarial, rarely see anaphylaxis
39Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury
- TRALI--ARDS from transfusions
- Donor antibodies react against recipient
leukocytes in the alveoli, causing degranulation,
bilateral pulmonary edema, and hypoxia
40TRALI
- Onset is 1-2 hours after transfusion, presents
within 4-6 hours by definition - Fever, hypotension, hypoxia, dyspnea, pink foam
from endotracheal tube - CXR shows bilateral diffuse infiltrates
- Normal heart function
- No other discernable cause
41TRALI
- Treatment is supportive
- Most patients recover in 2-3 days, but may need
ventilatory support - Notify blood bank for testing of donor units
42Volume Overload
- Not uncommon when an elderly or CHF patient
receives multiple transfusions - Consider invasive monitoring if massive
transfusions required in the CHF patient
43Immunosuppression
- Blood transfusions induce immune tolerance
- May increase post-operative infection rates,
increase cancer recurrence rates - Leukoreduction is felt to mitigate this effect
44Transfusions How To?
- Ask circulating nurse if blood is available
- If not and you think patient may need it, find
out if blood bank has a clot (answer will be no
for all outpatients) - Draw one pink-top tube and send to blood bank,
tell them how much to get ready
45Blood Typing
- Type and screen patients red cells are tested
for ABO and Rh, screened for any unusual
antibodies - Type and cross a sample of the patients blood
is mixed with the donors blood to check for
reaction--these units are designated for your
patient
46Blood Typing
- Plasma needs ABO matching only
- Platelets and cryo do not need to be matched
47Blood Typing
- In emergent situations, a limited number of Type
O-negative units are kept in the blood bank - Type O-positive units can also be given, but
avoid if possible in pre-menopausal women
48Blood Administration
- Use a filter infusion set
- Platelets come from the blood bank with their own
special filter - Use a fluid warmer for PRBCs and FFP
- Dont mix blood products with LR
- Dont put platelets through pressure infusers
49Massive Transfusion Protocol (MTP)
- Details on the Transfusion Medicine website
- Blood products come in series of shipments with
pre-determined ratios to balance PRBCs with
other components
50MTP
- Idea is that you simply just give the stuff as it
comes at you, until its no longer needed - All blood components still must be checked in
51Special Considerations in MTP
- Citrate used in blood storage chelates calcium in
the patients blood - Potassium leaks from red cells during storage
- Lactic acid accumulates during storage
- The risk of adverse events from transfusions
increases as the number of transfused units
increases
52Conclusion
- Blood transfusions can save your patient
- Blood transfusions can (rarely) kill your patient
- Keep in mind that YOU give the blood, not the
surgeon, but keep communications open