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HAEMORRHAGE

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haemorrhage by dr hayder m. abdulnabi dm, cabs 29/02/1429 * types of bleeding depnding on the sourse of bleeding 1- arterial bright red and comes in jets with the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HAEMORRHAGE


1
HAEMORRHAGE
  • BY
  • Dr
  • HAYDER M. ABDULNABI
  • DM, CABS

2
TYPES OF BLEEDING
  • DEPNDING ON THE SOURSE OF BLEEDING
  • 1- ARTERIAL BRIGHT RED AND COMES IN JETS WITH
    THE PULSE OF THE PATIENT
  • 2- VENOUS DARK RED BLOOD , STEADY AND COPIOUS
  • 3- CAPILLARY BRIGHT RED RAPID OOZE ( ABRASIONS )

3
  • DEPENDING ON THE TIME OF OCCURANCE
  • 1- PRIMARY BLEEDING OCCURS AT THE TIME OF
    INJURY OR OPERATION
  • 2- REACTIONARY BLEEDING USUALLY OCCURS IN 4-6
    HOURS OR WITH IN THE 24 HOURS THAT FOLLOW THE
    PRIMARY BLEEDING, DUE TO EITHER SLIPPING OF
    LIGATURE , DISLOGEMENT OF A CLOT OR CESSATION OF
    THE REFLEX VASOSPASM.
  • THE PRESIPITATING FACTOR ARE
  • A- THE INCREASE IN THE BLOOD PRESSURE AFTER
    RECOVERY FROM SHOCK OR ANASTHESIA

4
  • B- RESTLESSNESS OF THE PATIENT
  • C- COUGHING AND VOMITING THAT INCREASE THE VENOUS
    PRESSURE
  • 3- SECONDARY BLEEDING OCCUR WITHIN 7-14 DAYS
    AFTER THE PRIMARY TRAUMA OR OPERATION AND THE
    CAUSE IS ALWAYS INFECTION WHICH LEADS TO
    SLOUGHIN OF AN ARTERY IN AN AREA BY PRESSURE OF A
    DRAIN TUBE OR A BONE FRAGMENT OR BY SLIPPING OF A
    LIGATURE IN AN INFECTED AREA OR MALIGNANT TISSUE

5
  • DEPENDING ON THE VISIBILITY
  • A- EXTERNAL ( REVEALED ) BLEEDING
  • B- INTERNAL ( CONCAELED ) BLEEDING LIKE
    INTRA-ABDOMINAL OR INTRACRANIAL BLEEDING
  • THE INTERNAL BLEEDING MAY BECOME EXTENAL AS
    IN HEMATEMESIS DUE TO A BLEEDING PEPTC ULCER OR
    HEMATURIA AFTER RENAL INJURY OR AN INTRUTERINE
    BLEEDING TURNS INTO BLEEDING PER VAGINA

6
HOW TO MEASURE ACUTE BLOOD LOSS ?
  • A NORMAL BLOOD VOLUME IS 80-85 ML / KG IN INFANTS
    AND ABOUT 65-75 ML / KG IN ADULTS
  • 1- BLOOD CLOT SIZE A CLENCHED FIST SIZE CLOT
    ROUGHLY EQUALS 500 ML
  • 2 - SITE OF A CLOSED SWELLING -- A MODERATE
    SWELLING IN A TIBIA EQUALS TO 500- 1500 ML OF
    BLOOD, WHILE A MODERATE SWELLING IN A FEMUR
    EQUALS TO 500-2000 ML OF BLOOD LOSS
  • 3- SWAB WEIGHING BY SUBSTRACTING THE WEIGHT OF
    SOACKED SWABS FROM THEIR WEIGHT WHEN THEY WERE
    DRY AND THE BLOOD LOSS IS 1 ML FOR EVERY 1 GM
    DIFFERENCE
  • 4- HEMOGLOBIN LEVEL ESTIMATION THERE IS NO
    IMMEDIATE DECREASE IN Hg LEVEL AFTER BLEEDING BUT
    AFTER 8 HOURS IT WILL DROP BECAUSE OF THE INFLUX
    OF THE INTERSITIAL FLUID INTO THE VASCULAR
    COMPARTEMENT ( DILUTION )

7
TREATMENT
  • 1- PRESSURE ON THE SITE OF BLEEDING BY PACKING
    OR DIGITS OR BALOONS INFLATED AT THE SITE OF
    BLEEDING ( ESOPHAGEAL VARICES)
  • 2- REST AND POSITION BY ELEVATION OF THE
    INJURED LIMB TO DECREASE BLOOD RETURN TO THE
    HEART
  • 3- OPERATIVE PROCEDURES BY USING HEMOSTATS,
    CLIPS, DIATHERMY, LIGATURES, GELATIN SPONGES, AND
    ADRENALIN SOACKED GAUZE ( 1 1000 )
  • 4- BLOOD TRANSFUTION

8
INDICATION OF BLOOD TRANSFUSION
  • 1- ANEMIA-- recent study showed that a
    transfusion threshold of 70 g/l was as safe and
    possibly superior to one of 100 g/l in critical
    care patients. A minimum preoperative haemoglobin
    of 100 g/l is no longer regarded as essential, as
    many patients with a lower haemoglobin tolerate
    surgery and seem to recover just as well.

9
  • 2- blood loss IF greater than 30 per cent of
    estimated blood volume,
  • Patients with massive blood loss, defined as
    those requiring transfusion of a volume of blood
    greater than their blood volume within 24 h
  • Depletion of coagulation factors is unusual,
    because stored blood contains adequate amounts of
    all except for factors V and VIII, which fall
    during storage.

10
  • 3- REPLACEMENT OF BLOOD COMPONENTS
  • RED WHITE BLOOD CELLS, COAGULATION FACTORS,
    PLASMA
  • Procedure for blood transfusion
  • 1- Pretransfusion compatibility testing -- A.
    Blood grouping ,The ABO and RhD groups of the
    patient are determined.
  • b Donor blood of the same ABO and RhD group as
    the patient is selected.
  • D. Cross-matching-- The full cross-match
    involves testing the patient's plasma against a
    sample of the red cells from the donor unit in a
    direct agglutination test.

11
  • 2- Blood ordering A. Elective surgery--
    Sufficient time should be allowed for the
    laboratory to carry out pretransfusion testing.
  • B.
    EmergeNCIES-- There may be insufficient time for
    full pretransfusion testing.use 2 units of O
    RhD-negative blood ('emergency stock') , to allow
    additional time for the laboratory to group the
    patient.

12
  • 3- Blood, blood components, and blood products--
    Blood collected from donors is processed into
  • A- Blood components, such as red cell and
    platelet concentrates, fresh frozen plasma and
    cryoprecipitate, which are prepared from a single
    donation of blood by simple separation methods
    such as centrifugation, and transfused without
    further processing.
  • B- Blood products, such as coagulation
    factor concentrates and albumin and
    immunoglobulin solutions, which are prepared by
    complex processes using the plasma from many
    donors as the starting material.

13
Strategies for avoiding or reducing the use of
blood tranfusion
  • By discontinuing antiplatelet and anticoagulant
    drugs, if possible, several days before surgery.
  • Anaemia, if present, should be investigated and
    treated appropriately in advance of elective
    surgery.
  • Intraoperative measures include the use of
    meticulous surgical and anaesthetic techniques, a
    cautious use of anticoagulants during surgery,
    and the use of drugs to enhance haemostasis AND
    THE USE OF AUTOLOGOUS TRANSFUSION.

14
  • Autologous transfusion
  • There are three types of autologous transfusion
  • 1- Predeposit. The patient donates 25 units of
    blood at approximately weekly intervals before
    elective surgery.
  • 2- Preoperative haemodilution. One or two units
    of blood are removed from the patient immediately
    before surgery and retransfused to replace
    operative losses.
  • 3- Blood salvage. Blood lost during or after
    surgery may be collected and retransfused.
    Several techniques of varying levels of
    sophistication are available. operative site must
    be free of bacteria, bowel contents, and tumour
    cells.

15
Complications of blood transfusion
  • 1-- Immediate haemolytic transfusion reactions
  • This is the most serious complication of
    blood transfusion and is usually due to ABO
    incompatibility. There is complement activation
    by the antigen-antibody reaction, usually due to
    IgM antibodies, leading to rigors, lumbar pain,
    dyspnoea, hypotension, haemoglobinuria, and renal
    failure. At the first suspicion of any serious
    transfusion reaction, the transfusion should
    always be stopped and the donor units returned to
    the blood transfusion laboratory with a new blood
    sample from the patient to exclude a haemolytic
    transfusion reaction.

16
  • 2-- Delayed haemolytic transfusion reactions
  • These may occur in patients alloimmunized by
    previous transfusions or pregnancies. The
    antibody titre is too low to be detected by
    pretransfusion compatibility testing, but a
    secondary immune response occurs after
    transfusion, resulting in destruction of the
    transfused cells, usually by IGg antibodies. The
    patient may develop anaemia and jaundice about a
    week after the transfusion, although many are
    clinically silent.

17
  • 3-- Non-haemolytic (febrile) transfusion
    reactions
  • Febrile reactions are a common complication of
    blood transfusion in patients who have previously
    been transfused or pregnant. The usual cause is
    the presence of leucocyte antibodies in the
    recipient acting against transfused leucocytes,
    leading to release of pyrogens. Typical signs are
    flushing and tachycardia, fever (gt38C), chills,
    and rigors. Paracetamol may be used to reduce the
    fever.

18
  • 4--Urticaria And Anaphylaxis
  • Urticarial Reactions Are Often Attributed To
    Plasma Protein Incompatibility But, In Most
    Cases, They Are Unexplained. They Are Common But
    Rarely Severe Stopping Or Slowing The
    Transfusion, And Intravenous Chlorpheniramine
    10 Mg (Adult Dose), Are Usually Sufficient
    Treatment.
  • Anaphylactic Reactions Occasionally Occur Severe
    Reactions Are Seen In Patients Lacking IgA Who
    Produce Anti-IgA That Reacts With IgA In The
    Transfused Blood. The Transfusion Should Be
    Stopped And Adrenaline 0.5 Mg Intramuscular And
    Chlorpheniramine 10 Mg Intravenous Should Be
    Given Immediately Endotracheal Intubation May Be
    Required.

19
  • 5 Transmission Of Infection
  • Hepatitis, Human Immunodeficiency Virus Other
    Viruses Cytomegalovirus, Epsteinbarr Virus,
    Human T-cell Leukaemia/Lymphoma Virus Type 1
    (HTLV-1) Parasites Malaria, Trypanosomiasis,
    Toxoplasmosis Syphilis AND Transfusion Of Blood
    Contaminated With Bacteria
  • 6-- Circulatory Failure Due To Volume
    Overload.7-- Iron Overload Due TO Multiple
    Transfusions. 8-- Massive Transfusion Of Stored
    Blood May Cause Bleeding And Electrolyte Changes.
    9-- Thrombophlebitis 10-- Air Embolism
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