1. Intraoperative Autotransfusion of RBC and PRP
- Author
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H. Gombotz and Alexander Kulier
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Context (language use) ,Hematology ,Perioperative ,Surgery ,law.invention ,Cardiac surgery ,Medical–Surgical Nursing ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,law ,Anesthesia ,Platelet-rich plasma ,medicine ,Cardiopulmonary bypass ,Immunology and Allergy ,Plasmapheresis ,business ,Trauma surgery ,Autotransfusion - Abstract
SUMMARY When IAT is used, the patient's shed blood is collected continuously from the wound site during surgery. The salvaged red cells are stored in a dedicated reservoir and subsequently processed by cell separation (continuous centrifugation), washed with saline, concentrated and retransfused to the patient. In the context of perioperative blood saving strategies, IAT has gained standard-of-care status in many surgical procedures as it is especially cost-effective when the anticipated intraoperative blood loss is likely to exceed 1000 mL (major orthopedic, cardiac, vascular and emergency trauma surgery). IAT is not primarily recommended for cancer surgery or whenever the operative field is contaminated. Intraoperative plasmapheresis (IP) is used in cardiac surgery to minimize coagulation deficiencies caused by the traumatizing effects of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) on platelets. A substantial amount of the patient's circulating platelets is withdrawn prior to heparinization and initiation of CPB. The collected autologous platelet-rich plasma is then stored at room temperature, preserving platelet function and plasmatic coagulation factors, and retransfused to the patient after heparin reversal. There is controversy about the actual blood saving benefit of IP, but this method may be effective in complicated procedures precipitating high blood loss and long CPB times. In addition, IP may be used when other autologous whole blood harvesting techniques are not an option.
- Published
- 1999
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