Title: Paediatric blood transfusion
1Paediatric blood transfusion
- Dr. Chitra Rajeswari T
- Dr. Lokesh Kashyap
www.anaesthesia.co.in anaesthesia.co.in_at_gmail.c
om
2Why to transfuse blood
- Basic physiological function is to ensure
adequate oxygenation of the tissues - Physiology of oxygen transport
3Hypoxic hypoxia
Anaemic hypoxia
Histotoxic hypoxia
Stagnant hypoxia
4Anaemic hypoxia
5Oxygen delivery
- DaO2
- Cardiac output X CaO2 oxygen content
- Oxygen content
- Hb saturation X 1.34 X Hb conc 0.003 X
PO2 - Amount of oxygen carried by 100 ml of blood
-
6Fetal hemoglobin
Cardiac reserve
Increased metabolism
7Fetal hemoglobin
- HbF 70-80 of full term and 97 of premature
infants total hemoglobin at birth
8Fetal hemoglobin
- Shorter life span of 90 days (HbA- 120 days)
- HbF interacts poorly with 2,3,DPG
- P50 with HbF is 19 mmHg
- P50 with HbA is 27 mmHg
- Leftward shift of ODC
9ODC
10Hemoglobin for equivalent oxygen delivery
P 50 Hb
Adult 27 10
Infants gt3 month 30 8.2
Infants lt3 month 24 14.7
Motoyama et al. 1990
116 months- 6 years
12 7- 13 years
13
12Preoperative hemoglobin
- At the time of nadir
- Term infant with Hb lt 9 g/dl
- Preterm infant lt7 g/dl
- Haemoglobin levels that are adequate for the
older patients may be suboptimal in the younger
infant
13Fetal hemoglobin
Cardiac reserve
Increased metabolism
14Adult vs children - cardiac reserve
- Children have a higher cardiac output to blood
volume ratio than adults
Estimated circulating blood volume Estimated circulating blood volume
Age Blood volume (ml/kg)
Premature infant 90-100
Term infant 3 months 80-90
Children older than 3 months 70
Very obese children 65
Sandra et al. Pediatric anesthesia 2005
15Adult vs children - cardiac reserve
- The neonatal myocardium operates at near maximum
level of performance as a baseline - The newborns heart may be unable to compensate
for a decreased oxygen carrying capacity by
increasing cardiac output - The neonatal myocardium will also suffer a
greater degree of decompensation when exposed to
decreased oxygen delivery
16Metabolism
17When to transfuse blood?
18MABL
- MABL Starting Target hematocrit
- Blood loss more than this target value then RBC
cell transfusion should be initiated - 65 ml of packed RBC Hct 70 150 ml of whole
blood Hct 30 - 0.5 ml of PRBC for each ml of blood loss beyond
the MABL - 1 ml/kg PRBC raises the hematocrit by 1.5
X EBV
Starting hematocrit
19- May benefit from higher hematocrit
- Preterm and term infants
- Cyanotic congenital heart disease
- Large ventilation/ perfusion mismatch
- High metabolic demand
- Respiratory failure
20Guidelines for perioperative management of anemia
Minimum acceptable hemoglobin
Infants gt 3 months 8 g/dl
Infants lt 2 months Ex-premie lt52 weeks PCA 10g/dl
Infants in first week of life Weight lt 1500 g With cardiopulmonary disease 12g/dl
21Guidelines contd
- In an elective setting, anemia should be
evaluated and treated,surgery may be postponed
for a month or longer - Cumulative record of blood loss should be kept
for critically ill infants and loss replaced when
it exceeds 10 of blood volume
22Guidelines contd
- In an emergency setting, anesthesia administered
with extreme caution - Maintain high PaO2
- Adequate cardiac output
- Adequate intravascular volume
- Avoid factors increasing oxygen consumption
- Avoid leftward shift of ODC
23Guidelines contd
- Oxygen extraction ratio
- as hematocrit drops to 15, OER increases from
38 to 60 - Central venous Po2
- Decline of pVo2 is the most sensitive indicator
of anemia - Normal gt 38 mm Hg
Holland et al. 1987
24Pediatric transfusions guidelines
- Platelet transfusions
- platelet count less than 50000 in acute bleeding
- Less than 1 lakh for intracranial and
Subarachnoid or extra corporeal circulation
procedures - 5 mL/kg - 10 mL/kg causes a rise of platelets of
50 to 100 109/L - Fresh frozen plasma
- aPTT or PT gt 1.5 times normal
- 10-15 ml/kg
- Cryoprecipitate
- Fibrinogen 100 mg/dl
- 1 unit /10 kg BW raises plasma fibrinogen by 50
mg/dl
25Transfusion reactions
- Acute transfusion reactions ( lt 24 hours)
- Febrile nonhemolytic reaction
- Urticarial/allergic reaction
- Acute hemolytic reaction
- Bacterial contamination and sepsis
- Fluid overload
- Anaphylaxis
- TRALI
- Delayed transfusion reaction
- Infection
- Delayed hemolytic reaction
- Post transfusion purpura
- Graft Vs host disease
- Iron overload
26TRALI
- TRALI
- Acute hypoxemia
- Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema
- During or after transfusion
- Leading cause of transfusion-related mortality in
2003 FDA, TRALI conference - Underdiagnosis underreporting
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28Incidence
- All plasma-containing blood blood components
- 1/5,000 blood blood component
- 1/2,000 plasma-containing component
- 1/7,900 units of FFP
- 1/432 units of whole blood derived platelets
29Pathophysiology
- Leukocyte antibodies
- Biologically active substance
- Lipids cytokines
- Neutrophil priming activity
- Leukocyte Antibodies
- Neutrophil in pulmonary capillary ? pulmonary
damage capillary leak - Antibody to donor leukocyte
- Ab to HLA I, II, granulocyte, monocyte, IgA
30Management
- Supportive
- Stop transfusion if timely recognition
- Oxygen and ventilatory support as employed in
ARDS - Avoid blood from multiparous female donors
31Immunologic
- Transfusion related graft vs host disease
- Lymphocytes in transfused blood component
proliferate and cause host tissue destruction - Immunocompromised patient
- Premature infants
- Children with cancer or severe systemic illness
- Acute blood loss
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
Prevented by irradiated blood
32Pediatric transfusions - neonates
- Neonates have some specific considerations with
respect to anesthesia and blood products. - Major hemolytic reaction (ABO) occurs less
frequently in neonates compared with older
children and adults. - For the first 34 months of life, infants are
unable to form alloantibodies to RBC antigens. - After 4 months of age, hemolytic reactions become
a potential factor
33Massive blood transfusion
34Definition
- Loss of one or more circulating blood volume in
24 hour - 50 blood volume in 3 hours
- Loss occurring at the rate of 2-3 ml/kg/min
35Problems of massive transfusion
- Hypocalcemia
- Hyperkalemia
- Hypomagnesemia
- Hypothermia
- Volume overload
- Dilutional coagulopathy
- Acid base changes
- Shift of ODC curve
- Microaggregate delivery
- TRALI
36Hypocalcemia
- Degree of ionized hypocalcemia depends upon
- Blood product transfused
- Rate
- Hepatic blood flow
- Hepatic function
37Hypocalcemia
- Degree of ionized hypocalcemia depends upon
- Blood product transfused
- Rate
- Hepatic blood flow
- Hepatic function
FFP
gt 1 ml / kg / min
Decreased ability to metabolise by neonate
38Hypocalcemia
Myocardial depression
Inhalational agents
Decreased ability to metabolise by neonate
39Prevention of hypocalcemia
- Rate should be lt 1 ml / kg / min
- If more than gt 1 ml / kg / min calcium should
also be transfused - Calcium infusion
- Calcium chloride 5-10 mg/kg
- Calcium gluconate 15-30 mg/kg
- Frequent measurement of ionised calcium
40Hyperkalemia
- Blood components with high potassium
- Whole blood
- Irradiated blood
- Near the expiry date
41Prevention of hyperkalemia
- Washing of erythrocytes
- Newer blood (lt 7 days)
- Avoiding whole blood and prefer packed RBC
42Treatment
- CaCl2 15-20 mg/kg
- Calcium gluconate 45-60 mg/kg
- 1-2 min intervals until the arrhythmia is
resolved - Glucose and insulin
- Hyperventilation
- Albuterol
- kayexalate
43Hypomagnesemia
- Result of citrate toxicity
- Stabilizes the resting membrane potential
- Life threatening arrhythmia that dose not respond
to exogenous calcium therapy needs magnesium
sulphate - 25-50 mg/kg followed by 30-60 mg/kg/24 hours
44Acid-base changes
- RBC metabloism can elevate the dissolved CO2 to
180-210 mmHg - Anaerobic metabolism increases the lactic acid
content - Initial transient combined respiratory and
metabolic acidosis - Citrate metabolism leads to metabolic alkalosis
45Hypothermia
- Shift to left of ODC curve decreased oxygen
delivery - Apnea
- Hypoglycemia
- Decreased drug metabolism
- Increased oxygen consumption
- Coagulopathy
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47Coagulopathy
- Massive blood transfusion leads to
thrombocytopenia - 40, 20 and 10 of starting platelet count is
seen after 1st, 2nd and 3rd blood volume loss - Dilution and loss of clotting factors
- Clotting factor deficiency should be anticipated
after one blood volume loss
48Recombinant factor VIIa
- Retrospective review of use of factor 7a in
children undergoing major neurosurgical
procedures experiencing massive uncontrollable
hemorrhage - Useful adjunct to control life threatening
bleeding,but more extensive research is needed - Uhring et al Ped crit care med, 2007
49Mechanism of action
50Blood Conservation
- Preoperative Autologous Donation
- Acute Normovolemic Hemodilution
- Intraoperative Blood Salvage
- Preoperative Erythropoietin
- Positioning
- Hypotensive anaesthesia
- Pharmacological enhancement of hemostasis
- Artificial blood
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