| Literature DB >> 29755709 |
Kwame Ofori Adjepong1, Folashade Otegbeye2, Yaw Amoateng Adjepong3.
Abstract
Over 30 million people worldwide have sickle cell disease (SCD). Emergent and non-emergent surgical procedures in SCD have been associated with relatively increased risks of peri-operative mortality, vaso-occlusive (painful) crisis, acute chest syndrome, post-operative infections, congestive heart failure, cerebrovascular accident and acute kidney injury. Pre-operative assessment must include a careful review of the patient's known crisis triggers, baseline hematologic profile, usual transfusion requirements, pre-existing organ dysfunction and opioid use. Use of preoperative blood transfusions should be selective and decisions individualized based on the baseline hemoglobin, surgical procedure and anticipated volume of blood loss. Intra- and post-operative management should focus on minimizing hypoxia, hypothermia, acidosis, and intravascular volume depletion. Pre- and post-operative incentive spirometry use should be encouraged.Entities:
Keywords: Perioperative management; Sickle cell disease; Surgical procedures; Transfusion
Year: 2018 PMID: 29755709 PMCID: PMC5937979 DOI: 10.4084/MJHID.2018.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis ISSN: 2035-3006 Impact factor: 2.576
Common surgical procedures in sickle cell disease.
| Cholecystectomy | |
| Splenectomy | |
| Appendectomy | |
| Cardiopulmonary Bypass | |
| Valve and congenital defect repairs | |
| Pulmonary Thrombectomy | |
| Cystoscopy | |
| Transurethral Resection | |
| Tonsillectomy | |
| Pressure-equalizer tube insertions | |
| Intracerebral aneurysm ablation | |
| Cesarean Section | |
| Hysterectomy | |
| Dilation and Curettage | |
| Tubal Ligation | |
| Hip Arthroplasty | |
| Drainage of bone infections | |
| Insertion of Indwelling Vascular Access Lines |
Percent Hb S concentration in selected major Sickle Cell genotypes.
| Genotype | # Hb S | % other Hemoglobins | Hb (g/dL) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Hb SS | >90% | Hb A | 0% | 6–9 |
| Hb A2 | <3.5% | |||
| Hb F | <10% | |||
|
| ||||
| Hb Sβ0 thal | >80% | Hb A2 | >3.5% | 7–9 |
| Hb F | <20% | |||
|
| ||||
| Hb Sβ+ thal | >60% | Hb A | 10–30% | 9–12 |
| Hb A2 | >3.5% | |||
| Hb F | <20% | |||
|
| ||||
| Hb SC | 50% | Hb C | 45% | 9–14 |
| Hb A2 | <3.5% | |||
| HbF | ≤ 1.0 | |||
Cardiac and Pulmonary Complications in Sickle Cell disease.
| Congestive Heart Failure | ||
| Cardiomegaly | ||
| Cardiomyopathy | ||
| Mitral Valve Prolapse | ||
| Hypertension | ||
| EKG Abnormalities | ||
| Left Ventricular Hypertrophy | ||
| Right Ventricular Hypertrophy | ||
| First degree A-V Block | ||
| Cardiac Hemosiderosis | ||
| Atelectasis | ||
| Acute Chest Syndrome | ||
| Pulmonary Embolism | ||
| Fat Embolism | ||
| Pneumonia | ||
| Pulmonary Hypertension | ||
| Plastic Bronchitis | ||
| Reactive airway disease | ||
| Restrictive lung disease | ||
| Chronic Sickle Cell Lung Disease |
Randomized control trials.
| Year | Author | Size | Intervention | Comparison | Genotype | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Howard et al. | 70 | Simple RBC transfusion | No transfusion | SS, Sβ0thal | High SCD-related complications in the no transfusion group |
| 2002 | Al-Jaouni et al. | 369 | Simple or partial exchange | No transfusion | SS | Increased complication rates in the transfused group |
| 1995 | Vichinsky et al. | 604 | Exchange transfusion | Conservative Transfusion | SS | No difference in post-operative SCD-related complications |
Observational studies
| Year | Author | Size | Study Description | Genotype | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Amar et al. | 14 | Retrospective review. Simple or exchange transfusion versus no transfusion | SS | No benefit from routine pre-op transfusion |
| 2011 | Aziz et al. | 40 | Retrospective review. Simple or exchange transfusion versus no transfusion | ?? | No difference between exchange ad conservative transfusion. Lowest rate in the no transfusion group. |
| 2009 | Marulanda et al. | 23 | Aggressive versus simple transfusion | SS | Both were effective. Lowest complication rate in the aggressive transfusion group. |
| 2008 | Al-Samak et al. | 85 | Simple versus exchange versus no transfusion | SS | Complication rates of 22.2% in the exchange, 9.5% in simple transfusion, and 4.34% in the no transfusion group |
| 2008 | Augier et al. | 29 | Restrospective review. Transfusion rate of 32% | 79% were SS | 50% complication rate for the transfusion group and 27% for the no transfusion group |
| 2005 | Buck et al. | 114 | Exchange versus top up transfusion | SS, SC, SB thal | No difference |
| 2005 | Fu et al. | 28 | Retrospectve review of minor elective procedures. | SS | No acute chest syndrome. |
| 2003 | Wali et al. | 39 | Conservative versus aggressive transfusion | SS, SC. SB thal | No difference |
| 1998 | Neumayr et al. | 92 | Retrospective review. Transfusion versus no transfusion. | SC | No difference for minor procedures. Higher complication rates for abdominal procedures in the no transfusion group. |
| 1997 | Haberkem et al. | 364 | Exchange vrs Simple transfusion versus no transfusion | SS/ Sβ0 thal | No difference |
| 1995 | Koshy et al. | 717 | Cohort study. Transfusion (simple or exchange) versus no transfusion | SS, SC, Sβ thal | SC – transfusion gp had lower rates of complications. |
| 1993 | Bhattacharyya et al. | 22 | Retrospective review. Exchange versus sequential transfusion | SS, SB thal | No difference |
| 1993 | Griffin and Buchanan. | 54 | No pre-op transfusion | ? | No increase in complication rates (compared to reported rates from other centers) |