Ch. 8 - Blood management Flashcards

1
Q

What is the average cost of an RBC unit transfusion?

A

$225

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2
Q

What percentage of RBC transfusions are inappropriate?

A

50%

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3
Q

What is the most common cause of anemia?

A

Iron deficiency.

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4
Q

What is the significance of preoperative anemia?

A

It is a major predictor of postoperative mortality and the single biggest predictor of perioperative transfusion.

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5
Q

Compare the efficacy of oral and IV iron therapy.

A

Enteric iron therapy is poorly tolerated and has many harmful side effects when compared to IV iron. IV iron is also preferred when treating patients with erythropoiesis stimulating agents.

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6
Q

What are the elements of informed consent prior to blood transfusion?

A
  1. A description of the risks, benefits, and alternatives.
  2. The opportunity to ask and receive answers to questions.
  3. The right to accept or refuse the treatment.
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7
Q

Name four formulations of IV iron.

A

Iron dextran
Iron sucrose
Sodium ferric gluconate
Ferumoxytol

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8
Q

What history is important in managing coagulation risk?

A

Spontaneous bruising and bleeding, medication use, family history.

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9
Q

When should antiplatelet drugs be stopped before surgery? Warfarin? Heparins?

A
ASA: 7-10 days
Clopidogrel/Tiagrelor: 5 days
Warfarin: 1-8 days, depending on INR
UFH: Hours.
LMWH: 1 day
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10
Q

Numerous studies have supported transfusion threshold at __g/dL.

A

7-8g/dL

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11
Q

Name three techniques aimed at reducing intraoperative blood loss.

A

Preoperative autologous donation
Acute normovolemic hemodilution
Cell salvage

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12
Q

How effective is preoperative autologous blood donation?

A

Not very; intraop blood loss is unpredictable and half of units are discarded.

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13
Q

How is acute normovolemic hemodilution meant to reduce intraoperative blood loss?

A

Removal of whole blood prior to surgery means that fewer red cells are lost in hemorrhage. The whole blood is returned after surgery.

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14
Q

How is cell salvage performed?

A

Blood is washed and/or filtered, and must be reinfused within 6hrs of collection.

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15
Q

How much blood is drawn in ICU patients for lab tests alone? How much of a Hb drop does this constitute?

A

An average of 40-70mL per day. 100mL constitutes an average drop of 0.7g/dL, so this means around -0.4g/dL daily for lab tests alone.

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16
Q

What are the three types of performance or blood utilization review required by AABB of all facilities?

A

Prospective (real-time) review
Concurrent review
Retrospective review

17
Q

What is prospective (real-time) review of blood utilization?

A

Real-time review of requests, which allows for the chance to intervene or stop inappropriate transfusion requests.

18
Q

What is concurrent review of blood utilization?

A

Review that occurs 12-24hrs following the transfusion episode.

19
Q

What is retrospective review of blood utilization?

A

Review of aggregate transfusion data and trend in transfusion utilization. This is generally done by transfusion medicine committee.

20
Q

What certification is offered by the AABB, and how is it administered?

A

Patient Blood Management Certification; voluntary certification offered via AABB & Joint Commission.