Blood Transfusion Flashcards

1
Q

List the blood components that make up one donation of blood

A

Red cells
Platelets
White cells
Plasma

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2
Q

When is plasma deemed “fresh frozen plasma”?

A

If frozen within 8 hours of blood collection, containing the coagulation proteins in the same concn that was present in the patient’s blood

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3
Q

List some blood products that can be acquired from batches of blood via manufacturing

A

Albumin
Immunoglobulin
Prothrombin complex concentrates

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4
Q

Blood products are made from thousands of donors. True/False?

A

True

Giving one bottle of blood product to a patient exposes them to thousands of donors

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5
Q

What must be done to donor blood to separate it into components?

A

Anticoagulation

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6
Q

For standard blood donation, how often may someone donate blood?

A

Every 12 weeks

Max 5 a year

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7
Q

List the basic criteria for a blood donor

A

Able to spare 465ml of blood
Minimum weight 50kg
Hb 13.5 (male)/12.5 (female)

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8
Q

Who should avoid donating blood?

A

Infective risk
Transmitting disease (malignancy)
Drug addicts
Recent foreign travel to endemic areas

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9
Q

Describe the order/position of blood components in a bag once blood has been centrifuged

A

Red cells at bottom (most dense)
Platelets + white cells in middle
Plasma at top (least dense)

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10
Q

At what temperature must red cells be stored?

A

4’C +/- 2’C

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11
Q

What is the shelf life of donated red cells? What happens if they are removed from storage for more than 30 mins?

A

35 days

If removed for more than 30 mins, must be transfused or discarded

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12
Q

At what temperature must platelets be stored?

A

22’C

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13
Q

What is the shelf life of donated platelets?

A

7 days if bacterial monitoring system applied

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14
Q

At what temperature and for how long must fresh frozen plasma be stored?

A

-30’C for up to 3 years

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15
Q

What are the possible blood groups a person can be?

A

A
B
AB
O

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16
Q

Describe the red cell membranes of ABO blood groups

A

A: carry A-antigen
B: carry B-antigen
AB: carry A-antigen + B-antigen
O: no A or B antigen

17
Q

Order the blood groups from highest to lowest population frequency

A

O, A, B, AB

18
Q

Which of the ABO blood groups is the universal donor? Why?

A

O is universal donor because blood carries no antigen and therefore other blood groups won’t form antibody against it

19
Q

Which of the ABO blood groups is the universal recipient? Why?

A

AB is universal recipient because it carries both antigens and therefore won’t form antibody against any of the other blood groups

20
Q

Naturally occuring ABO antibodies are what - Ig?

A

IgM

Small proportion are IgG

21
Q

The genes that determine our ABO group are located on which chromosome?

A

Chromosome 9

22
Q

Which alleles for ABO group are dominant?

A

A and B are co-dominant

O is recessive

23
Q

The genes that determine Rhesus-D status are located on which chromosome?

A

Chromosome 1

24
Q

Inheritance of Rhesus-D follows what pattern?

A

Autosomal dominant

25
How is blood group determined?
Agglutination | Giving antibody to individual of same blood type (e.g. anti-A to group A) will cause cells to stick together
26
What must a doctor's prescription for blood transfusion state?
Number of units Special requirements Rate of transfusion Accompanying medication
27
List possible indications for red cell transfusion in anaemia
Reduced exercise capacity Medical/surgical issue Heart or lung disease "anaemic" symptoms
28
List physiological response to acute blood loss
Increased heart rate + force of contraction Vasoconstriction to protect organs Fluid shift from ECF to ICF
29
List indications for platelet transfusion
``` Low platelet count (duh!) Bleeding symptoms Underlying infection/fever Surgical requirement/recovery Platelet functional defects (myeloma) ```
30
List indications for fresh frozen plasma transfusion
``` Liver disease (impaired coagulation) Disseminated intravascular coagluation ```
31
What does the acute haemolytic transfusion reaction involve?
Activation of complement, coagulation and kinin systems due to circulating antibody to donor blood
32
What are the effects of complements C3a and C5a?
Increase vascular permeability Dilate blood vessels Release toxins and inflammatory markers (serotonin, histamine)
33
What is the effect of bradykinin?
Arteriolar dilation Increase vascular permeability Leading to hypotension
34
What action must be taken in an acute haemolytic transfusion reaction?
Stop blood transfusion Give IV fluids Obtain blood sample: transfusion, FBC, film, coagulation screen, biochemistry, blood culture, haptoglobin)
35
What does haptoglobin do?
Binds free haemoglobin