Transfusion Complications Flashcards
What is the most common complication with transfusions?
febrile nonhemolytic reaction:
- fever, chills, dyspnea
- inflammatory mediators from donor lymphocytes
- can be delayed respone up to 6 hours
What allergic reactions are associated with blood transfusion?
Severe lifethreatening reaction:
- rare (1 in 20,000-50,000)
- IgG mediated
Urticarial reactions:
- allergen in donor blood
- IgE mediated
What acute hemolytic reactions occur as complications with transfusion?
ABO incompatability:
- preformed IgM/complement mediated intravascular hemolysis
- no previous sensitazation required (preformed Abs)
- rapid onset fever, chills, flank pain (rapidness differentiates from febrile nonhemolytic?)
- can progress to DIC, shock, acute renal failure, or death
What delayed hemolytic reactions occur as complications with transfusion?
Minor blood group (non-ABO) incompatability:
- IgG/complement mediated intravascular hemolysis
- previous sensitazation required
- against Rh, Kell, Kidd
- delayed onset fever, chills, flank pain
What is TRALI?
Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury
- activation of primed neutrophils in the lung
- primed in the setting of lung disease
- donor Ab that recognizes recipient MHC
- sudden onset respiratory failure with bilateral infiltrates
-fever, hypotension, hypoxemia
What complications occur in those who receive chronic blood transfusion?
How is this addressed?
Development of antibodies to minor blood group types (outside of ABO/Rh) such as Kell, Duffy, and Kidd.
Should try to recieve blood from as genetically similar of a donor pool as possible