Transfusions Of Red Blood Cella Under Scrutiny

Main Category: Blood / Hematology
Also Included In: Cardiovascular / Cardiology;  Stroke
Article Date: 27 Nov 2007 - 2:00 PDT

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'Transfusions Of Red Blood Cella Under Scrutiny'

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Bristol scientists have found that red blood cell transfusions given to people having heart surgery could increase the risk of heart attack or stroke.

Published in the latest issue [November 27] of the journal Circulation, the study looked at the association between red blood cell transfusion and adverse outcomes in over 8,500 cardiac surgery patients over eight years.

The research, funded by the British Heart Foundation (BHF), found patients who received a red blood cell transfusion experienced a three-fold increase in complications arising from lack of oxygen to key organs -- such as in a heart attack or stroke. This is a finding at odds with the widely held belief that red cell transfusion improves delivery of oxygen to tissues.

The study, by scientists at the University of Bristol and the Bristol Heart Institute, showed that the risks associated with transfusion occurred regardless of the haemoglobin levels (the oxygen-carrying substance in red blood cells), age, or level of patient disability at the time of transfusion.

Professor Peter Weissberg, Medical Director at the BHF says: "Red blood cells carry oxygen around the body to supply vital organs. Not unreasonably therefore, heart surgeons have assumed that patients who have low red blood cell counts after surgery -- as a result of blood loss during or shortly after surgery -- would benefit from a 'top up' transfusion of donated red blood cells.

"This study shows the importance of putting such widespread beliefs to the test since it suggests that such transfusions may cause more problems than they solve. The results are a step towards making heart surgery even safer by flagging up an issue we can now address through research and improved transfusion guidelines."

As well as the human costs, the financial cost of giving transfusions and treating transfusion-related illnesses increased the overall cost of staying in hospital by over 40 per cent.

Gavin Murphy, Walport Consultant Senior Lecturer in Cardiac Surgery at the University of Bristol, who led the study said; "This study demonstrates the cost implications of our current transfusion practice. This is important, particularly in modern health systems where resources are finite, and should encourage the sort of research that will address the major health issues raised in the study."

In the UK over half of all heart surgery patients are given blood. However, only about 3 per cent of these transfusions are given because of life-threatening bleeding. The remainder are usually given on the basis of a low haemoglobin level, regardless of whether the patient has physical symptoms to suggest they need blood.

The researchers now intend to carry out a larger study to see if changing transfusion guidelines could improve patient outcomes. For the time being it is suggested that surgeons think twice before giving their patients a transfusion.

More research is needed to find out how red cell transfusions may affect immunity or tissue oxygenation to cause these harmful effects, and to determine how stored donor blood products may be made safer prior to transfusion.

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Source: Joanne Fryer
University of Bristol

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Maybe Its Not The Cells, But What They Have Been Exposed To

posted by Elizabeth F Cole MD on 5 Dec 2007 at 2:45 pm

If allergy to polyurethane, as in the Asthma Epidemic, allergic contact dermatitis is a common as it may be, then we need to consider just how much polyurethane any and all blood products are exposed to, and may be related to adverse effects during apheresis, transfusion of any blood or its moities, surgeries, especially prolonged, transplant, repeated. And this sleeping giant does need investigation.

Blood is collected from donors, possibly through PU needle, most certainly through PU IV tubing. It is stored in PU bags, it is separated into moities by refrigerated centrifuges where it is again exposed to many feet (20-30?) of flexible-in- the-cold PU tubing , stored once again in reuseable PU bags and placed in PU refrigeration, awaiting delivery to a patient through, you guessed it, PU IV tubing.

The effect of this allergen may be tachycardia, unrelated to the surgery but to severe systemic allergic reaction (anaphylaxis), which could very quickly with increased heartrate cause death, other adverse reaction whose real cause is hidden, assigned to the known risks of the proceedure itself.

Polyurethane is as ubiquitous in medical instrumentation of any kind, ocular pressure reading instruments tipped with it, sigmoidoscopes made of it (anaphylaxis not uncommon in this frequently performed examination), tubing of all sorts, now IV needles, This is worth consideration.

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