Podcast #142 – Whole Blood, Tricks with Blood Products, and Stop the Bleed
Description
Whole blood has a relatively short lifespan. It is packaged with citrate-phosphate- dextrose (CPD) which has a 21 day shelf life and CPD-adenine (CPDA-1) which has a 35 days shelf life. Usually, the whole blood is first held in places less likely to use it (like in the field) and then brought back to a major trauma center to avoid waste.
Not everyone needs O negative blood. Women of childbearing age is most appropriate. Children are generally recommended to also get O negative blood especially in females. RhoGAM can theoretically be used after the female of childbearing age received positive blood. However, both the RhoGAM and the blood use in children has very limited evidence and is more theoretical.
Whole blood is still not widely available, so what should we give if it is not available? The more recent evidence is for 1:1:1 ratio of packed red blood cells (PRBCs), fresh frozen plasma (FFP), and platelets. If only one thing could be accessed first, Andy recommended plasma first given its versatility and benefits in trauma such as plasma can help replace some of the clotting factors and increase intravascular volume. People can live with being anemic for a period of time and still carrying oxygen with the remaining blood, but volume and clotting is more important. Also, if blood is not being clotted, the oxygen carrying PRBCs will most likely just end up on the floor.
In general, crystalloid fluids are not needed in early resuscitation. They may be needed to help facilitate the massive transfusion protocol especially if whole blood is not present. However, it may be needed to facilitate the delivery of medications such as calcium, tranexamic acid (TXA), and antibiotics. The risks of hypocalcemia are significant and it is better to give 1-2 grams of calcium at the early stages of transfusion such as after the first couple of products are given or sooner. Both calcium chloride and TXA could be given together but this has not been fully tested.
Make sure to check out Stop The Bleed and get involved. May is Stop The Bleed Month and we as healthcare professionals can play a pivotal role by encouraged our public officials, citizens, and other agencies to learn hemorrhage control which can be lifesaving until those patients can get to definitive care. As a fun side note, check out a page dedicated to Andy called Saint Fisher Church of Evidence Based Medicine which will give you a chuckle while being educational.
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