| Literature DB >> 35186524 |
Muhammad Saad Yousuf1, Khalid Samad2,3, Syed Shabbir Ahmed1, Khalid M Siddiqui1, Hameed Ullah1.
Abstract
Cardiac surgery is typically attributed with a significant risk of intraoperative blood loss and allogeneic blood transfusions. Intraoperative blood loss, allogenic blood transfusions, high dose anticoagulation requirement, and interactions with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) have all been linked to cardiac surgeries. To reduce unnecessary transfusions and their negative effects, it is recommended to follow evidence-based multidisciplinary strategies, which are collectively termed patient blood management (PBM). This review highlights the most recent blood conservation strategies in adult cardiac surgery, which can be employed pre-operatively, intra-operatively, and postoperatively, to enhance red cell mass and attenuate the utilization of packed red blood cells (PRBCs) and other blood products.Entities:
Keywords: blood conservative strategies; blood loss; blood transfusion; cardiac surgery; cardiopulmonary bypass
Year: 2022 PMID: 35186524 PMCID: PMC8844256 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.21222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Recommendations for patient blood management in adult cardiac surgery
AT: antithrombin; ACT: activated clotting time; CPB: cardiopulmonary bypass; CABG: coronary artery bypass grafting; DDAVP: 1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (desmopressin); FFP: fresh frozen plasma; MUF: modified ultrafiltration; PRBC: packed red blood cells; rFVIIa: recombinant factor VIIa; RAP: retrograde autologous priming
| Recommended | Should Be Considered | Not Recommended |
| Limitation of hemodilution | Continue Aspirin in CABG | Preoperative erythrocyte transfusion in anaemic patients |
| Routine use of antifibrinolytics | Cell salvage, MUF, and RAP should be implemented | AT supplementation to minimize bleeding following CPB |
| Transfusion of PRBC based on the patient clinical condition rather than a haemoglobin level | Consider Heparin level measurements over ACT-guided heparin management | Prophylactic Fibrinogen, FFP, DDAVP or rFVIIa administration |
| PRBCs of all ages | Protamine to heparin dosing ratio <1:1 | |
| Multidisciplinary team approach |