| Literature DB >> 36077883 |
Camilla A Jamieson1, Sarah L Baillie1, Jessica P Johnson1.
Abstract
Transfusion medicine is a crucial part of equine intensive and critical care. Blood transfusions can save lives in both acute and chronic cases of anemia, hemorrhage, and hemolysis. It is vital to have a comprehensive theoretical and practical understanding of the techniques, implications, risks, and complications. This review covers the physiology and pathophysiology of conditions requiring transfusion, as well as step by step guidance for practitioners of all experience levels. This review is designed to serve as a practical reference for those who are treating horses in either the field or hospital setting. It aims to provide both theoretical background and easy to locate formulae with guidance that is easy to refer to in a critical situation. When risks and benefits are well understood, these techniques can be confidently employed in critical situations to improve outcomes and save lives.Entities:
Keywords: critical care; emergency medicine; hematology; horse; transfusion
Year: 2022 PMID: 36077883 PMCID: PMC9454663 DOI: 10.3390/ani12172162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Indications for blood transfusion in horses [8].
| • Tachycardia |
| ○ The higher the heart rate (HR) the more urgent |
| ○ Severe bleeding may be accompanied by HR > 100 beats/min |
| • Tachypnoea |
| ○ As above |
| • Decreased pulse quality |
| ○ Thready pulses |
| ○ Hard or impossible to palpate |
| • Cool extremities |
| • Pale mucus membranes |
| • Mentation changes |
| ○ Anxiety |
| ○ Distress |
| ○ Depression |
| ○ Compulsive thirst |
| • Hyperlactatemia |
| ○ Serial sampling most helpful |
| ○ Progressive increase indicates decreasing perfusion |
| • Decreased PCV |
| ○ Acute drop of 10% |
| ○ Absolute PCV < 12–15% usually requires |
| ○ ±Decreased TS |
Figure 1Crude slide agglutination test for blood type compatibility. Major cross match demonstrated. (A) Recipient serum separated from erythrocytes, donor erythrocytes separated from serum, and saline. (B) Amount of 1 drop saline and 1 drop donor erythrocytes, placed onto a glass slide. (C) Addition of 1 drop of recipient serum, the slide gently rocked until the three components were well combined. (D) No agglutination observed—compatible. (E) Agglutination grossly apparent in the mixed sample—incompatible.
Reference formulae for calculating required blood volumes.
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| Alternate Calculations: |
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Volumes and frequencies of blood that can be safely harvested from donor horses without detriment to donor.
| Blood Volume (BV)—8% BW (kg) |
| 20% of BV |
| Example: |
| 450 kg horse-circulating volume = 36 L |
| 20% of 36 L = 7.2 L |
| Alternately: |
| 10% BV every 4 weeks |
| 7.5% BV every 7 days |
| 1% BV every 24 h |
Emergency Drug Doses.
| Drug | Dose | Dose per 450 kg Horse |
|---|---|---|
| Dexamethasone 2 mg/mL | 0.02–0.1 mg/kg IV | 4–20 mL IV once a day |
| Prednisolone 50 mg/mL | 2–5 mg/kg IV | 18–45 mL IV once a day |
| Epinephrine/Norepinepherine 1:1000 (1 mg/mL) | 0.01–0.02 mg/kg IV-(anaphylaxis) up to 0.5 mg/kg for asystole | 4–9 mL IV repeated up to 3 times—can increase dose up to 225 mL for asystole |