Lecture 20 - Practical Aspects of Blood Transfusion Flashcards
Aims of pre transfusion testing?
provide RBC for transfusion that will survive normally in recipients circulation, and avoid haemolytic tranfusion reactions
Steps in ensuring safe transfusionn?
correct patient, ABORh typing, handwritten sample labelling, antibody screen, compatibility test, final bedside identity check
Steps of pre-transfusion testing?
ABO Rh typing, antibody screen (Anti-human Globulin Technique) and blood component selection
Group and screen?
situations when blood requirement risk is low e.g. surgery, antibody screen should be negative, serum retained in lab 7 days, available immediately on request
3 compatibility tests?
Full cross match (usually only if antibody positive), immediate spin crossmatch (ABO msimatch) and computer crossmatch
Criteria of final bedside check?
full name DOB, NHI, blood group
Monitoring of transfusion?
major problems give early symptoms - stop the transfusion, maintain the line w saline and seek advice
Acute transfusion reactions - differential diagnosis?
bacterial sepsis, immediate haemolytic transfusion reaction, anaphylaxis, circulatory overload, febrile non-haemolytic transfusion reactions
Bacterial sepcosis?
contamination of blood component w endotoxin releasing bacteria, sudden onset hypotensive shock, severe progression - more likely in platelets kept at room temp therefore cultured
Immediate haemolytic reaction?
rare, ABO incompatibility, renal failure, hypotension and disseminated intravascular coagulation, 10% fatal
Extravascular Haemolytic reactions?
IgG presence in plasma and early phase complement activation
Delayed Haemolytic transfusion reaction?
Hb fall and jaundice week after, casued by anamnestic antibody response (previous transfusions, pregnancy, non-detected)
Febrile Non Haemolytic Transfusion Reactions?
common, occur in response to biological resposne modifiers accumulating in blood sample, reduced with leucodepletion
Transfusion related Acute Lung Injury?
transfusion of donor plasma containing neutrophil/HLA antibodies causing agglutination in pulmonary vasculature, prevented using male plasma only and HLA antibody testing
Transfusion related circulatory overload - those at risk?
compromised CVS, renal failure, congestive heart failure, transfusion volume too large for intravascular volume