CHAPTER 6 Transfusion Therapy
4 Historically, a hemoglobin level of 10 g/dl (hematocrit of 30) was used as a transfusion trigger. Why is this is no longer an accepted practice?
It is also interesting to note that men and women tend to be treated equally when the decision to transfuse is made, despite the fact that normal women are anemic relative to men. Using the same transfusion triggers hardly seems rational. Finally there is a concern that a transfusion might not substantially increase oxygen delivery (see discussion of blood storage lesions in question 8). These are strong arguments for closely scrutinizing the consideration to transfuse.
7 Review the major transfusion-related reactions
Hemolytic transfusion reactions caused by ABO incompatibility are most commonly caused by clerical errors and transfusion of the wrong unit. Mistransfusion is thought to occur with a frequency between 1:14,000 and 1:18,000. Most reactions occur during or shortly after a transfusion. Clinical manifestations include fever; chills; chest, flank, and back pain; hypotension; nausea; flushing; diffuse bleeding; oliguria or anuria; and hemoglobinuria. General anesthesia may mask some of the clinical manifestations, and hypotension, hemoglobinuria, and diffuse bleeding may be the only signs. It should be noted that the signs of a severe hemolytic reaction might be missed while the patient is under general anesthesia or attributed to another cause.
Anaphylactic reactions are caused by binding of IgE; present with bronchospasm, edema, redness, and hypotension; and require urgent treatment with epinephrine, fluid infusions, corticosteroids and antihistamines, and other therapies as indicated by severity and progression of symptoms.
Febrile reactions may be an early sign of hemolytic transfusion reaction (but other symptoms should be present) or bacterial contamination of the blood product. Febrile nonhemolytic transfusion reactions usually occur in patients who have had prior transfusions; headache, nausea, and malaise are associated symptoms. The reaction is caused by leukocyte antibodies, and leukocyte-depleted red blood cells may be indicated for these patients. Antipyretics may decrease the symptoms if given before the transfusion; meperidine may decrease the severity of chills.
Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is in the top three of transfusion-related deaths, having a mortality of 50%. A form of noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, TRALI is also immune related and is usually noted within 6 to 12 hours after transfusion. Symptoms include hypoxia, dyspnea, fever, and pulmonary edema; treatment is supportive.
Urticarial reactions secondary to mast cell degranulation do not require that the transfusion be stopped; antihistamines may be given.