scholarly journals RESULTS OF THERAPY OF ERYTHROBLASTOSIS WITH EXCHANGE TRANSFUSION

Blood ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER S. WIENER ◽  
IRVING B. WEXLER

Abstract 1. In the authors’ technic of exchange transfusion, citrated blood is introduced into the saphenous vein at the ankle and the infant’s blood simultaneously withdrawn from the radial artery at the wrist, coagulation being prevented by the administration of small amounts of heparin. The procedure besides being simple, is safe, there having been no operative mortality in more than 40 transfusions. 2. The results of exchange transfusion therapy in erythroblastosis in our first 28 cases are presented. Of these 28 cases, 16 were very severe and almost certainly would have been lethal if left untreated, 6 were of moderate severity, and 6 were mild. Only 7 of the infants died, and the available data indicate that the mortality would have been at least twice as high had the usual treatment with simple transfusions been given. 3. Aside from its greater efficacy in reducing mortality, exchange transfusion is more efficient, so that supplementary treatment is not required as a rule. 4. Fresh blood should be used instead of bank blood because of its greater survival time and smaller likelihood of introducing infection. 5. All infants who have survived have developed normally both physically and mentally and have shown no sequelae of liver or brain damage. 6. The most reliable index of the severity of the disease in the erythroblastotic infant is provided by antenatal titrations of the maternal univalent Rh antibodies, as well as by tests for the presence of univalent antibodies in the infant’s blood.

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
John Porter

For reasons of time, this short talk will be confined to the optimal frequency, timing, indications and dosing of blood transfusion. Blood transfusion protocols in thalassaemia syndromes are more widely agreed (1) than for sickle disorders but questions still remain about optimal Hb levels, timing and frequency. In transfusion thalassaemia thalassaemias (TDT) , the purpose of blood transfusion is to maximise quality of life by correcting anaemia and suppressing ineffective erythropoiesis, whilst minimising the complications of the transfusion itself. Under-transfusion will limit growth and physical activity while increasing intramedullary and extra-medullary erythroid expansion. Over transfusion may cause unnecessary iron loading and increased risk of extra-hepatic iron deposition however. Although guidelines imply a ‘one size fits all’ approach to transfusion, in reality this is not be the case. Indeed a flexible approach crafted to the patient’s individual requirements and to the local availability of safe blood products is needed for optimal outcomes. For example in HbEβ thalassaemias, the right shifted oxygen dissociation curve tends to lead to better oxygen delivery per gram of Hb than in β thalassaemia intermedia with high Hb F. Patients with Eβthal therefore tend to tolerate lower Hb values than β thalassaemia intermedia. Guidelines aim to balance the benefits of oxygenation and suppression of extra-medullary expansion with those of excessive iron accumulation from overtransfusion. In an Italian TDT population, this balance was optimised with pre-transfusion values of 9.5-10.5g/dl (2). However this may not be universally optimal because of different levels of endogenous erythropoiesis with different genotypes in different populations. Recent work by our group (3) suggests that patients with higher levels of endogenous erythropoiesis, marked by higher levels of soluble transferrin receptors, at significantly lower risk of cardiac iron deposition than in those where endogenous erythropoiesis is less active, as would be the case in transfusion regimes achieving higher levels of pre-transfusion Hb. In sickle cell disorders, the variability in the phenotype between patients and also within a single patient at any given time means that the need for transfusion also varies. A consideration in sickle disorders, not usually applicable to thalassaemia syndromes, is that of exchange transfusion versus simple top up transfusion. Exchanges have the advantages of lower iron loading rates and more rapid lowering of HbS%. Disadvantages of exchange transfusion are of increased exposure to blood products with inherent increased risk of allo-immunisation or infection, requirement for better venous access for adequate blood flow, and requirements for team of operators capable of performing either manual or automated apheresis, often at short notice. Some indications for transfusion in sickle disorders are backed up by randomised controlled data, such as for primary and secondary stroke prevention, or prophylaxis of sickle related complications for high-risk operations (4). Others are widely practiced as standard of care without randomised data, such as treatment of acute sickle chest syndrome. Other indications for transfusion, not backed up by randomised studies, but still widely practiced in selected cases, include the management of pregnancy, leg ulceration or priapism and repeaed vaso-occlusive crises. Allo-immunisation is more common in sickle patients than in thalassaemia disorders and hyper-haemolysis is a rare but growing serious problem in sickle disorders. It is arguable that increased use of transfusion early in life, is indicated to decrease silent stroke rates and that early exposure to blood will decease red cell allo-immunisation rates.


Author(s):  
Susanna A. Curtis ◽  
Balbuena-Merle Raisa ◽  
John D. Roberts ◽  
Jeanne E. Hendrickson ◽  
Joanna Starrels ◽  
...  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1954 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 412-418
Author(s):  
GERALD MILLER ◽  
AUGUSTA B. MCCOORD ◽  
HOWARD A. JOOS ◽  
SAMUEL W. CLAUSEN

Alterations in concentrations of serum potassium are reported in infants studied during exchange transfusion therapy for erythroblastosis. The elevated plasma potassium content of citrated whole blood following prolonged storage may produce hyperkaliemia in some infants. The authors have suggested that hypocalcemia and hyperkaliemia may coexist in some of these babies during exchange transfusion. Certain implications regarding the cumulative effects of these two disturbances are discussed in relation to exchange transfusion.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 125 (22) ◽  
pp. 3401-3410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adetola A. Kassim ◽  
Najibah A. Galadanci ◽  
Sumit Pruthi ◽  
Michael R. DeBaun

Abstract Neurologic complications are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in sickle cell disease (SCD). In children with sickle cell anemia, routine use of transcranial Doppler screening, coupled with regular blood transfusion therapy, has decreased the prevalence of overt stroke from ∼11% to 1%. Limited evidence is available to guide acute and chronic management of individuals with SCD and strokes. Current management strategies are based primarily on single arm clinical trials and observational studies, coupled with principles of neurology and hematology. Initial management of a focal neurologic deficit includes evaluation by a multidisciplinary team (a hematologist, neurologist, neuroradiologist, and transfusion medicine specialist); prompt neuro-imaging and an initial blood transfusion (simple followed immediately by an exchange transfusion or only exchange transfusion) is recommended if the hemoglobin is >4 gm/dL and <10 gm/dL. Standard therapy for secondary prevention of strokes and silent cerebral infarcts includes regular blood transfusion therapy and in selected cases, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. A critical component of the medical care following an infarct is cognitive and physical rehabilitation. We will discuss our strategy of acute and long-term management of strokes in SCD.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 4850-4850
Author(s):  
Mansi Lalwani ◽  
Mary DeBarr ◽  
Ann O'Riordan Mary ◽  
Connie M Piccone ◽  
Brian W Berman

Abstract Abstract 4850 Introduction: Nearly 100,000 Americans are affected by sickle cell disease (SCD), making it one of the most prevalent genetic disorders in the United States. Individuals with SCD exhibit significant morbidity and mortality related to chronic hemolysis, vasculopathy, and vascular occlusion by red cell sickling. Currently, red cell transfusions are a primary therapy for some of the acute and chronic complications of SCD, including prevention and treatment of stroke. The benefits of transfusion therapy are well known; however, transfusional iron overload is an inevitable consequence. Excess iron in the circulation leads to the formation of reactive oxygen species which ultimately causes end-organ damage. It is well established that adult SCD patients with significant iron overload have a higher mortality. As a result, exchange transfusion protocols are utilized to try to decrease overall iron overload. In our center, a modified manual exchange (MME) protocol is used which involves therapeutic phlebotomy of approximately 5–7.5ml/kg followed by the infusion of 15–20ml/kg packed red blood cells. MME is performed in the outpatient setting every 4–6 weeks with a goal hemoglobin S of less than 30%. Objective: The primary objective of our study was to describe the benefits of a MME protocol compared with a simple transfusion protocol in patients experiencing both. The effects of MME versus simple tranfusion on systemic iron overload were evaluated using serum ferritin levels, net transfusion volume, and need for iron chelation therapy. Study Design/Methods: A retrospective chart review was performed on patients with SCD (type SS) less than 18 years of age who were on chronic transfusions and transitioned from a simple to a MME protocol. All patients included were on chronic transfusions for primary/secondary stroke prevention. Exclusion criteria included all patients on automated exchange transfusion protocols and those patients who started iron chelation therapy after January 1, 2008. Demographic as well as clinical and laboratory data were collected on each patient. A simple transfusion was defined as 20ml/kg packed red blood cells transfused every 4–6 weeks. The MME protocol was defined as above. Iron overload was assessed using indicators including net volume of blood transfused, serum ferritin, and the need for iron chelation during both time periods, and differences were calculated. The Wilcoxon signed rank test was used for the change in amount of blood transfused. Slopes of ferritin levels over time were estimated for each transfusion protocol separately using mixed model methods. The need for chelation therapy was tabulated for each patient. Results: A total of six patients were included in the study, 4 boys and 2 girls. Ages ranged from 6–14 years. Four patients had been on chronic transfusions for more than 2 years prior to the start of our study. The mean net volume transfused during simple transfusion and MME was 400ml and 290ml, respectively (p=0.03). The slope of ferritin rise was 0.18 (CI: 0.11, 0.84) for MME and 1.37 (CI: 0.56, 2.17) for simple transfusion. One patient was taken off chelation therapy completely after transitioning to MME and another patient was maintained on low-dose chelation while on MME. Conclusions: MME appears to reduce the amount of blood transfused, slow the rise of ferritin, and potentially reduce the need for additional medication. MME may provide a safe and cost effective approach for delaying or preventing iron overload in patients with sickle cell disease who require long term transfusion therapy. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2012 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 169-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony T.W. Cheung ◽  
Joshua W. Miller ◽  
Maricel G. Miguelino ◽  
Wilson J. To ◽  
Jiajing Li ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 33-39
Author(s):  
Irina G. Mikhailova ◽  
Aleksandr V. Moskovskiy ◽  
Yuriy N. Urukov ◽  
Antonina V. Karpunina ◽  
Olesya I. Moskovskaya ◽  
...  

The aim of this work was to determine the values of plaque accumulation indices and oral hygiene indices, to conduct a comparative assessment before the start of multimodality therapy in patients with mild and moderate parodontitis and after its completion among the adult population of the Chuvash Republic. The study of index evaluation values of 146 patients aged 33–62 years with a diagnosis "chronic generalized parodontitis of mild and moderate severity" was conducted. The age range was determined by the criteria for dividing the age groups according to WHO data – early adult (25–35 years), middle adult (36–45 years), late adult (46-60 years). The examination was carried out according to standard clinical methods of simplified oral hygiene index OHI-s (according to Green – Vermillion), dental plaque hygiene index (PI) Silness-Loe (1964), evaluation of the state of periodontal tissues PI (by Russel). The authors present the criteria for evaluating the indices before the start of standard treatment and after its completion for all the studied patients and in groups with mild and moderate severity of chronic generalized parodontitis. The authors give as well a comparative analysis of the patients’ index assessment depending on the severity of the disease, the dynamics of the infection resolution in groups with different degrees of of parodontitis severity.


Blood ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 107-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
SAMUEL PENNELL

Abstract 1. A method is described for the treatment of patients with erythroblastosis fetalis by the transfusion of compatible sedimented red cells from bank blood. 2. The case histories of 28 patients with erythroblastosis fetalis, treated by this method, have been analyzed. Three, or 10.7 per cent, of the patients died. This mortality rate compares favorably with other reports in which exchange transfusion was the therapeutic procedure. 3. The transfusion of sedimented red cells in 50-60 cc. amounts is sufficient to cause an adequate rise in the hemoglobin values with a minimum of load on the infant’s circulation. 4. This method, in contrast to that of exchange transfusion, has the advantage of reducing the administration of plasma to a minimum, thereby preventing further hemolysis of the infant’s red cells by enhancing the agglutinin titer. In addition, excessive amounts of extraneous substances such as sodium citrate are not given.


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