Perf Tech 3 Test 4 Flashcards
Transfusion Risks
- infectious
- febrile reactions (fever, chills)
- uticarial reaction (allergy)
- anaphylactice reactions
- acute hemolytic reaction
- volume overload
- hypothermia
- citrate toxicity
- potassium effects
- TRALI (transfusion related acute lung injury)
Techniques
1) auto donation
2) Prebypass autologous normovolemic hemodilution
3) retrograde autologous priming
4) dry venous line
5) mini circuits
6) ultrafiltraion/hemoconcentrator
7) Cell saver
8) re-infusion of shed blood
9) accept lower Hct
Auto Donation
patient donates own blood (can done just RBC, platelets, or plasma)
- must have Hct >33%
- contra= MI, CHF, stenosis, ischemia, HTN, angina
Prebypass Autologous Normovolemic Hemodilution
take blood from patient and replace with crystalloid
- must have Hct >35%
- spares platelets from bypass, remove 500-1000ml
- place in bag with anticoagulants and given after protamine
- contra- COPD, CHF, CAD, angina, valve issues, clotting issues
Retrograde Autologous Priming
uses patients BP to displace prime (200-600ml)
remove from ALF stopcock, manifold, Y’s
Dry Venous Line
requires VAVD, venous line emptied before connection to cannula
-only works if patient has enough volume pre-op
Mini Circuits
-lowers foreign SA, prime, air, hemodilution, inflammatory,, volume shifts
-no reservoir, HE, ALF
-centrifugal pump acts as BF and venous drainage
Ways to make pump better?
—shorten lines, closer to table, raise reservoir, dry venous line, lower prime
Ultrafiltration/Hemoconcentration
removing water, Na, K, bicarb from blood
Zbuff, MUF (afterwards)
Cell Saver
separate RBC. but loose plasma proteins, platelets, CF
Re-infusion of shed blood
blood into cell saver and delivered right back (without washing)
-only in emergencies and increases free Hgb, defibrination
Accept lower Hct
20-25%
-but if low clotting factors, high metabolic needs, respiratory issues= you NEED higher HCT
Platelet
150-450 x 10^3/uL of blood
2-3 um
7 day life spans
derived from magakaryocyte in bone marrow
3 Phases of Wound Healing
1) Inflammation (day 4-6)- hemostasis, pro-inflammatory cytokines, phago
2) Proliferation (day 6 to 2/3 weeks)- tissue granulation, fibroblasts lay collagen, angiogenesis, epitheliazation (cells migrate), wound edges touch
3) Maturation (21 days to 2 yr)- collagen maturation/stabilization, increase strength, scar tissue, 80% of strength
Platelet Growth Factors
1) Platelet Derived GF (PDGF)- collagen
2) Vascular Endothelial GF (VEGF)
3) Transforming GF Beta (TGF-B)
4) Fibroblast GF (FGF)- tissue repair, contraction
5) Epithelial GF (EGF)- keratinocyte migration
Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP)
- centrifugation process + thrombin, Ca
- harnesses platelets and GF
- contains 3-7x baseline platelet/GF
- increase healing, lowers infections/pain/swelling/scaring
- apply for chronic/nonhealing wounds, dental, orthopedic, plastic, cardio