Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Blood Loss and Transfusion Requirements in Liver Transplantation: Experience with the First 75 Cases

1994; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 22; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1177/0310057x9402200604

ISSN

1448-0271

Autores

P. L. McNicol, G. Liu, Ian Harley, Peter McCall, G. M. Przybylowski, J. Bowkett, Peter Angus, K. J. Hardy, Robert Jones,

Tópico(s)

Blood donation and transfusion practices

Resumo

The blood loss data and transfusion requirements including blood bank, salvaged washed red cells, fresh frozen plasma and cryoprecipitate were analysed for the first 75 cases of liver transplantation performed at the Austin Hospital between June 1988 and October 1992. The mean blood loss was 8.8 litres (standard deviation 14.1) with a median value of 4.0 litres. Blood product use expressed as mean number of units (SD) was bank red blood cells 7.1 (12.7), washed red blood cells 3.9 (5.9), fresh frozen plasma 7.1 (9.1), platelets 5.1 (7.4), and cryoprecipitate 1.7 (5.1). These results demonstrate that liver transplantation can be performed without imposing excessive demands on blood transfusion services. Management should include surgical techniques to minimize bleeding and use of autologous transfusion. Use of component therapy (FFP, platelets and cryoprecipitate) should not be empirical. It should be selective on the basis of clinical bleeding assessment and guided by results of the laboratory coagulation profile and changes in thrombelastographic (TEG) parameters.

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