Blood Products and Transfusion (Exam III) Stephen's Cards Flashcards

1
Q

What is blood comprised of primarily?

A

Plasma

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2
Q

What percentage of blood volume is made up by plasma?

A

55%

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3
Q

Which blood product has a ↑ risk of infection and why?

A
  • Pooled packs d/t being from multiple donors. (Platelets and Cryo are pooled from multiple donors)
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4
Q

If we had to pick one thing to transfuse what would it be?

A
  • whole blood
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5
Q

What blood type is a universal donor? Universal acceptor?

A
  • Donor = O neg
  • Acceptor = AB +
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6
Q

Which patient is the potential exception to accepting blood from an O+ donor?
If we have to, how can we compensate for this?

A
  • Pregnant women who are O- (Rh-), may have problems with the fetus
  • Rhogam
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7
Q

What are 2 Hb related issues we will see often in clinical settings?

A
  • β thalassemia → Hb Barts
  • α thalassemia → Hb H
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8
Q

What are the possible blood antigen types? What are possible Rh factors?

A
  • Antigen → A B AB O
  • Rh → Rh+ and Rh-
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9
Q

Is the general population primarily Rh+ or Rh- ?

A

Rh+ (85%) and Rh- (15%)

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10
Q

What 4 things can cause a right shift of the OxyHb curve?

A
  • ↓ pH
  • ↑ CO2
  • ↑ temp
  • ↑ 2,3-DPG
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11
Q

T or F: If our O₂ saturation is good so is our PO₂?

A
  • False → O₂sat has nothing to do with PO₂ (could have 1 Hb fully saturated; ex. anemia)
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12
Q

For blood type O which Antigen is present on erythrocyte and which Antibody is in the serum?

A
  • Antigen: n/a (no antigens, blood can go to anyone)
  • Antibody: Anti-A and Anti-B
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13
Q

For blood type AB which Antigen is present on erythrocyte and which Antibody is in the serum?

A
  • Antigen: A and B
  • Antibody: none (no antibodies, can receive blood from anyone)
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14
Q

For blood type B, which Antigen is present on erythrocyte and which Antibody is in the serum?

A
  • Antigen: B
  • Antibody: Anti-A
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15
Q

For blood type A which Antigen is present on erythrocyte and which Antibody is in the serum?

A
  • Antigen: A
  • Antibody: Anti-B
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16
Q

AB donor blood will react with which other blood types?

A
  • A, B, and O
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17
Q

B donor blood will react with which blood types?

A
  • A
  • O
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18
Q

A donor blood will react with which blood types?

A
  • B
  • O
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19
Q

O donor blood will react with which blood types?

A
  • none
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20
Q

When whole blood is centrifuged what separation products result?

A
  • Platelet rich plasma (PRP)
  • WBC
  • RBC
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21
Q

What happens if we centrifuge platelet rich plasma (PRP) again?

A
  • Centrifuge PRP again → Separates plasma from platelets
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22
Q

Where is PRP used in surgery?

A
  • Surgeon injects locally → ortho, dental, plastics cases commonly
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23
Q

What are the 5 different blood components we can use for treatments?

A
  • RBC
  • FFP
  • Cryo
  • PLT
  • LTOWB - Low titer Group O Whole Blood
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24
Q

What is the lifespan of WB?

A

~ 3 wks

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25
What chemicals are added to blood that allows it to be stored?
* CPDA-1 → Citrate phosphate dextrose adenine; chelates Ca++ to prevent clotting * Phosphate → used as buffer * Dextrose → fuel source * Adenine → to support ATP synthesis (extends storage from 21 to 35 days)
26
Due to the chemicals used to allow blood to be stored, what labs do we need to check when transfusing lots of blood?
* Ca++ (it will ↓) * Blood Glucse (it will ↑)
27
Which electrolyte will stored blood always have ↑ levels of? Why?
* K+ d/t cells lysing as they degrade in the bag
28
What happens to 2,3-DPG in stored blood? What does this do to the OxyHb association curve?
* ↓ 2,3-DPG * Left shift → impairs O2 delivery
29
PRBCs contain ______ unless they have been specifically ________?
* Leukocytes (WBCs) * Leukoreduced
30
How much does 1 unit of PRBCs ↑ H&H level?
* Hb: ↑ 1 g/dL * Hct: ↑ 3%
31
Which blood transfusion product is a source of antithrombin III?
FFP
32
What is the dose of FFP?
* 10-15 mL/kg
33
How much will 1 unit of FFP ↑ level of each clotting factor?
* ↑ 2 to 3% for each factor
34
What are two specific uses of FFP Dr. C mentioned in class?
* Heparin resistance d/t antithrombin deficiency * Treat angioedema (also use TXA along with FFP)
35
What is the INR of FFP?
* 1.5 to 1.8
36
What is Cryoprecipitate? What clotting factors does cryoprecipitate have?
The protein fraction that is taken off the top of the FFP when being thawed. * Factor VIII: C * Factor VIII: vWF * Factor XIII * Fibrinogen
37
What target of fibrinogen are we trying to maintain when using cryo?
100 mg/dL
38
How much will two units of cryo raise fibrinogen levels?
* 2 bags of cryo/10 kg body weight = 100 mg/dL ↑ in fibrinogen
39
Which patient population is cryo really important for?
* Pregnant women who are bleeding
40
How much will one unit of PLT increase PLT count by?
* 5000 to 10000
41
Is there any clinical data that says warming platelets is bad?
No, it's a common practice. *Except for platelet*
42
When platelets are low at what level will we start to spontaneously bleed?
PLT < 30000
43
What is the deadly triad when transfusing a patient?
* Hypothermic * Coagulopathic * Acidotic (NS pH is 5.5)
44
When is WB indicated for transfusion?
* To maintain volume and O2 carrying capacity in acute massive hemorrhage (> 20% blood volume loss )
45
What are S/Sx of Hemolytic transfusion reactions?
* fever * chill * hemoglobinemia * **hemoglobinuria (keep an eye on foley bag)** * **hypotension** * dyspnea (look for high airway pressure and RR)
46
What are the mediators of  Hemolytic transfusion reactions?
IgM antibodies *This is usually a result of the patient getting incompatible blood.*
47
What are the S/S of nonhemolytic febrile transfusion reactions?
Fever and chills
48
What are the mediators of non-hemolytic febrile transfusion reactions?
HLA Class Ag antibodies
49
How do we treat  Non-hemolytic febrile transfusion reactions?
* Antipyretics * Use leukocyte reduced products
50
What are some S/S of an allergic transfusion reaction?
* urticaria * erythema (blotchy red rashes) * itching * anaphylaxis.
51
What are the mediators of allergic transfusion reactions?
* plasma proteins * IgA antibodies
52
How do we treat allergic transfusion reactions?
* antihistamines * treat symptoms
53
What are S/S of  Non-cardiogenic pulmonary transfusion reactions?
* **Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema** - from a minimal amount of blood transfused. * ARDS * Fever * Chill * Hypotension * Cyanosis
54
What are the mediators for a non-cardiogenic pulmonary transfusion reaction?
Recipient WBC antibodies
55
How do we treat  Non-cardiogenic pulmonary transfusion reactions?
* Lots of PEEP (to force fluid back across the membrane) * Steroids
56
What is TRALI?
Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury - temporarily r/t to blood transfusion within 1st 6 hrs of a transfusion
57
What types of blood products is TRALI most associated with this?
* FFP * PLTs
58
What are the 3  acute nonimmunologic effects of transfusion reaction?
* Bacterial contamination (hemoglinuria- give abx) * Circulatory overload TACO * Hemolysis d/t physical /chemical means
59
What are the three delayed immunologic effects of transfusion reaction?
* Hemolytic transfusion reactions (Decrease Hgb value, Ig negative blood for future reactions.) * Transfusion-associated Graft-versus-host disease (N/V, Pancytopenia) * Post-transfusion purpura (Oozing--sterioids, IV Ig)
60
What are some quick ways to differentiate between TRALI and TACO? (This is very cut down from the main list)
* TRALI → Fever and ↓BP (Immunologic Response) * TACO → HTN, ↑JVP, ↓ EF (Fluid Overload)
61
What classes of hemorrhage are there and what is associated blood loss for each?
* Class 1 = up to 750 mL (< 15%) * Class 2 = 750 to 1500 mL (15-30%) * Class 3 = 1500 to 2000 mL (30-40%) * Class 4 = > 2000 mL (>40%)
62
What are 3 definitions of MTP in Adults?
* Total blood volume is replaced within 24 hours * 50% of total blood volume is replaced in 3 hours ← Most common * Rapid bleeding rate = 4 units RBCS transfused within 4 hours or 150 mL/min blood loss
63
What is considered MTP for Kids?
* > 40mL/kg transfusion
64
What is balanced resuscitation?
* 1:1:1 ratio (PLT:Plasma:RBC)
65
What are the fibrinogen levels of Cryo, FFP, and LTOWB?
* Cryo = 2500 mg * LTOWB = 1000 mg * FFP = 400 mg
66
What is the difference between stored whole blood (SWB) and LTOWB?
* SWB anticoagulants < LTOWB
67
What are the recommendations for whole blood transfusion in kids?
* If they are <15 yr old or <40 kg then limit WB to 30 mL/kg
68
Which clotting factors required Ca++ to work?
2 7 9 10
69
Which drug has more elemental calcium; Ca gluconate or CaCl?
* CaCL (270 mg/10mL vs 90 mg/10ml for gluconate)
70
How much will 1, 2, and 5 units of blood decrease iCa?
* 1 unit = 1.13 mmol/L * 2 unit = < 1mmol/L * 5 units = < 0.8 mmol/L
71
What is the value for TEG-ACT?
* 80-140 sec
72
What is the normal value for R time?
* 5.0 - 10.0 min
73
What is the normal value for K time?
* 1-3 minutes
74
What is the normal value for α angle?
* 53 - 72°
75
What is the normal value for MA?
* 50-70mm
76
What is the normal value for G value?
* 5.3-12.4 dynes/cm2
77
What is the normal value for LY 30?
* 0-3%
78
If TEG-ACT is > 140 what do we transfuse?
* FFP
79
If R time is > 10 what do we transfuse?
* FFP
80
If K time is > 3 what do we transfuse?
* Cryo
81
If α angle < 53° what do we transfuse?
* Cryo and platelets
82
If MA < 50 what do we transfuse?
* PLT
83
If LY30 > 3% what do we transfuse?
TXA (Tranexamic Acid)