ABO & RH Factor, Blood Transfusion
ABO & RH Factor, Blood Transfusion
ABO & RH Factor, Blood Transfusion
.
• 2. Transfusion carries the risk of adverse
reactions and transfusion-transmissible
infections.
• Exchange transfusion
Administration
• Must be ABO and RhD compatible with the
recipient
• Never add medication to a unit of blood
• Complete transfusion within 4 hours of
commencement
RED CELL CONCENTRATE (‘Packed red
cells’, ‘plasma-reduced blood’
Description
• 150–200 ml red cells from which most of the
plasma has been removed
• Haemoglobin approximately 20 g/100 ml
(not less than 45 g per unit)
• Haematocrit 55%–75%
Contraindications
• Not advised for exchange transfusion of
neonates. The additive solution may be
replaced with plasma, 45% albumin or an
isotonic crystalloid solution, such as normal
saline
PLATELET CONCENTRATES
• Prepared from whole blood donation
• Single donor unit in a volume of 50–60 ml of
plasma .
should contain:
• At least 5.5 x 109 platelets
• <1.2 x 109 red cells
• <0.12 x 109leucocytes
May be supplied as either:
• Single donor unit: platelets prepared from
one donation or
• Pooled unit: platelets prepared from 4 to 6
donor units ‘pooled’ into one pack to
contain an adult dose of at least 240 x 10 9
platelets
Storage
• Up to 72 hours at 20°C to 24°C (with
agitation) unless collected in specialized
platelet packs validated for longer storage
periods; do not store at 2°C to 6°C
Contraindications
Not generally indicated for prophylaxis of
bleeding in surgical patients, unless known to
have significant pre-operative platelet deficiency
(less than 50,000/μL)
Contraindications
• Idiopathic autoimmune thrombocytopenic
purpura (ITP)
• Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
• Untreated disseminated intravascular
coagulation (DIC)
• Thrombocytopenia associated with septicaemia,
until treatment has commenced or in cases of
hypersplenism
• Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (stop
heparin)
• Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)