scholarly journals 128 Clamping My Style: Case series of recurrent neonatal blood transfusions associated with immediate cord clamping

Author(s):  
Cormac Duff ◽  
Irene Beirne ◽  
Niazy Al-Assaf ◽  
Khorshed Khalifa
2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 372-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean McConachie ◽  
Krista Wahby ◽  
Zinah Almadrahi ◽  
Sheila Wilhelm

Jehovah’s Witnesses (JW) represent a complex patient population due to their refusal to accept blood transfusions on religious grounds. Pharmacologic management of anemic JW patients is limited to stimulation of hematopoiesis by iron and erythropoietin supplementation and reduction of blood loss by prothrombin complex concentrates (PCCs). Hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs) represent the only pharmacologic modality for JW patients capable of acutely increasing a patient’s oxygen carrying capacity in the setting of organ failure, yet clinical safety and efficacy data are lacking in this population. We report 3 cases in which the HBOC, PEGylated carboxyhemoglobin bovine (Sanguinate®), was requested under emergent circumstances for severely anemic (hemoglobin <5 g/dL) JW patients who refused blood transfusions. Two patients received PEGylated carboxyhemoglobin infusions for severe anemia, while the third patient died prior to receiving the medication. One patient who received Sanguinate died after 5 units of medication. The other patient’s hemoglobin recovered and she was discharged in stable condition. This series demonstrates the complex nature of the critically anemic JW population and highlights the clinical considerations of using HBOCs in clinical practice and the critical need for further research before they can be broadly recommended.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lutgardo García-Díaz ◽  
Ángel Chimenea ◽  
Juan Carlos de Agustín ◽  
Antonio Pavón ◽  
Guillermo Antiñolo

Abstract Background: The “Ex-Utero Intrapartum Treatment” (EXIT) procedure allows to ensure fetal airway before completion of delivery and umbilical cord clamping while keeping uteroplacental circulation. Airway obstruction in fetal oropharyngeal and cervical masses can be life-threatening at birth. In those situations, controlled access to fetal airway performed by a trained multidisciplinary team allows safe airway management, while feto-maternal circulation is preserved. We aim to review the indications and outcome of the EXIT procedure in a case series of fetal cervical and oropharyngeal masses.Methods: We have carried out a retrospective review of all patients with fetal cervical and oropharyngeal masses who underwent an EXIT procedure between 2008 and 2019. Variables evaluated included indication for EXIT, ultrasound and MRI findings, the need of amnioreduction, gestational age at EXIT, birth weight, complications, operative time, survival rate, pathological findings, and postnatal evolution. Five patients are included in this series. One additional case has already been published.Results: The diagnosis were cervical teratoma (n=1), epulis (n=1) and lymphangioma (n=3). Polyhydramnios was present in 2 patients, requiring amnioreduction in one of them. Mean gestational age at EXIT was 36-37 weeks (range, 34-38 weeks). Median EXIT time in placental support was 9 minutes (range, 3-22 minutes). Access to airway was successfully established in EXIT in all cases. All children born by EXIT are currently healthy and without complications. Conclusion: The localization and characteris­tics of the mass, its relationship to the airway, and the presence of polyhydramnios seem to be major factors determining indications for EXIT and clinical outcome.


1982 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 202-204
Author(s):  
SALLY GREAVES ◽  
ANDREA M. RAMIREZ ◽  
D. GRAEME WOODFIELD

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 4821-4821
Author(s):  
Matthew T. Whitehurst ◽  
Kaaron Benson

While chronic hepatitis due to HCV is a major health problem in the USA, blood transfusions pose a low risk of transmission. The federally mandated lookback process is initiated when a blood donor, previously negative or untested for HCV, now has a positive test. The process serves to identify any possible transmission during the “window period.” While there have been publications on lookback series from single institutions and countries, to date there has not been data presented solely from a cancer center. Moffitt Cancer Center (MCC), a large NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center, has had 291 HCV lookback investigations. Although the average age at time of transfusion was 51, this failed to include a number of patients on whom an electronic medical record was not created. Most of the transfusion recipients had advanced age or were ill from their cancer and had died prior to the investigation, accounting for 234 (80.4%) of the cases. Five of the cases were blood components that had expired and were never transfused. Six cases identified blood components that were never received and were actually transfused at other facilities. One case had no documentation of the recipient of the fresh frozen plasma unit. Eight cases were from patients who were alive but not tested either due to patient decision or inability to get in contact with them. Out of the 37 patients that were subsequently tested, 35 (94.5%) of them tested negative for HCV by either anti-HCV enzyme immunoassays (EIA) or nucleic acid amplification tests (NAT), or both. Only 2 patients (or 0.7% of all cases investigated) tested HCV seropositive (EIA and RIBA confirmed). Both transfusion recipients were elderly women who were asymptomatic for chronic hepatitis and who posed no current or past risk for transmission via their blood or body fluids. In our case series, 80.4% of recipients were deceased at the time of the investigation. The seroprevalence rate in our case series, among the 37 recipients tested for HCV and transfused between 1988 and 2012, was 5.4%. In the USA, HCV prevalence continues to be low with current estimates <1.5%. The CDC has recently expanded the recommendations for HCV testing to any persons born between 1945 and 1965, recipients of blood transfusions before July 1992, and patients with abnormal liver enzymes. Since the initiation of blood donor HCV EIA testing in 1990 and NAT testing in 1999, the risk of transfusion-transmitted HCV infection has plummeted. Given the improved public awareness of HCV, improved blood donor testing, and the low yield of the lookback process to both the recipient and society, discontinuation of the HCV lookback requirement should be considered. This case series also highlights that most transfusion recipients are either older or ill. As with HCV, several recent publications document the infrequency of transmitting human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) through modern transfusions; In England and Wales from October 1995 to December 2008, only 1 HIV positive recipient was identified with the lookback procedure. In conclusion, our large cancer center had almost 300 HCV lookback notifications and most transfusion recipients had advanced cancer and died prior to case investigation. The series found 94.5% of recipients tested had no evidence of HCV transmission. Consideration should be given to focusing HCV detection efforts on the general public and to eliminating the HCV lookback requirement in transfusion recipients. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lutgardo García-Díaz ◽  
Angel Chimenea ◽  
Juan Carlos de Agustín ◽  
Antonio Pavón ◽  
Guillermo Antiñolo

Abstract Background The “Ex-Utero Intrapartum Treatment” (EXIT) procedure allows to ensure fetal airway before completion of delivery and umbilical cord clamping while keeping uteroplacental circulation. Airway obstruction in fetal oropharyngeal and cervical masses can be life-threatening at birth. In those situations, controlled access to fetal airway performed by a trained multidisciplinary team allows safe airway management, while feto-maternal circulation is preserved. We aim to review the indications and outcome of the EXIT procedure in a case series of fetal cervical and oropharyngeal masses. Methods We have carried out a retrospective review of all patients with fetal cervical and oropharyngeal masses who underwent an EXIT procedure between 2008 and 2019. Variables evaluated included indication for EXIT, ultrasound and MRI findings, the need of amnioreduction, gestational age at EXIT, birth weight, complications, operative time, survival rate, pathological findings, and postnatal evolution. Five patients are included in this series. One additional case has already been published. Results The diagnosis were cervical teratoma (n = 1), epulis (n = 1) and lymphangioma (n = 3). Polyhydramnios was present in 2 patients, requiring amnioreduction in one of them. Mean gestational age at EXIT was 36–37 weeks (range, 34–38 weeks). Median EXIT time in placental support was 9 min (range, 3–22 min). Access to airway was successfully established in EXIT in all cases. All children born by EXIT are currently healthy and without complications. Conclusion The localization and characteristics of the mass, its relationship to the airway, and the presence of polyhydramnios seem to be major factors determining indications for EXIT and clinical outcome.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-49
Author(s):  
Sakeena Raza ◽  
Jeanne Wei ◽  
Syed Ashad Abid ◽  
Gohar Azhar

Background: Over 10% of adults older than 65 years have World Health Organization defined anemia (Hemoglobin lower than13 g/dl in men and 12 g/dl in women). It is more prevalent with increasing age, exceeding 20% in the very elderly (85 years and older). Typical symptoms of anemia are nonspecific and often attributed to aging or to an exacerbation of another illness in the elderly. Methods: We present a case series of patients between ages 65-99 years who were followed at the Senior Health clinic and presented with nonspecific symptoms. All these patients were found to have life-threatening anemia requiring blood transfusions. Design: Case series. Results: All our elderly patients experienced good outcomes in terms of resolution of their symptoms and improvement in functional status. There was a significant difference in the total number of symptoms pre-transfusion compared with symptoms post-transfusion (p < 0.01). There were no adverse outcomes. Conclusion: Our case series suggests that symptoms of anemia in the elderly are often attributed to aging or other disease co-morbidities. Nonspecific symptoms like dyspnea, fatigue and confusion should not be ignored. Management decisions regarding anemia should involve functional assessment of the elderly subject. Immediate arrangements for transfusion must be made if the elderly patient is symptomatic regardless of the hemoglobin level. If monitored appropriately, blood transfusions can prolong survival, improve quality of life and functional status of the older individual.


Author(s):  
Jyoti Jaiswal ◽  
Krishna Kumar Dehariya ◽  
Devina Nagraj

Background: Delayed cord clamping has been supported by physician because it allows for physiological transfer of blood from placenta to the infant and thus permits placenta to newborn transfusion and results in an increased neonatal blood volume at birth. At present there is no standard definition of delayed cord clamping. Clamping time varies significantly between studies and a wide range of parameters were used for clamping of cord.Methods: This was an observational study conducted in a public hospital among 200 uncomplicated full-term pregnancies where 100 each were present in early cord clamping (ECC) and delayed cord clamping (DCC) groups respectively and neonatal haematological parameters studied according to different cord clamping times.Results: There was a significant increase of mean haemoglobin level from 14.8 to 16.0 g/dl from 15 secs to 60 secs and gradual increase of mean haemoglobin level from 16.2 to 16.8 g/dl from 60 secs to 180 secs. There was a highly significant difference between ECC and DCC groups regarding mean haemoglobin level and MCH values. MCV and MCH values were also significantly different in both the groups.Conclusions: We concluded in this study that delayed cord clamping, resulted in improved haemoglobin and other haematocrit levels specially when cord was clamped after first 60 secs. Delayed clamping also reduced the prevalence of neonatal anaemia at 2 days of age. In terms of maternal outcomes, delayed umbilical cord clamping did not increase the risk of postpartum haemorrhage or the need for blood transfusion.


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