Lec 3 Blood Component PDF

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Altoosi University College

Dr. Ali Alkhafajy

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blood components blood transfusion medical lecture notes hematology

Summary

These lecture notes cover blood components, including whole blood, red blood cell concentrate, platelets concentrate, granulocyte concentrate, fresh frozen plasma, and cryoprecipitate. They also discuss the functions and applications of each component.

Full Transcript

Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3 Blood Components 1 Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3 Blood is a specialized body fluid. It has four main components: plasma, red blood cells...

Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3 Blood Components 1 Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3 Blood is a specialized body fluid. It has four main components: plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. Blood has many different functions, including:  transporting oxygen and nutrients to the lungs and tissues  forming blood clots to prevent excess blood loss  carrying cells and antibodies that fight infection  bringing waste products to the kidneys and liver, which filter and clean the blood  regulating body temperature The blood that runs through the veins, arteries, and capillaries is known as whole blood, a mixture of about 55 percent plasma and 45 percent blood cells. About 7 to 8 percent of your total body weight is blood. An adult human has approximately 65-70 ml of blood per kg of body weight. Therefore, humans have around 5 liters of blood in their bodies. The volume of blood is approximately 5.5 liters in each adult male and 4.5 liters in female Blood Components  Whole blood  RBC concentrate (called plasma reduce RBC)  Platelets concentrate  Granulocyte concentrate  Plasma components:  FFP (fresh frozen plasma)  Cryoprecipitate  plasma derive components     Whole Blood - Whole blood unit (450 ml ± 45 ml) contains: (250-300 ml RBC + 180 ml plasma) - Most available components but now restricted to use occasionally in acute blood loss, acute anemia, cardiac surgery or for exchange transfusion. - Store at 2-6 °C  2 Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3  RBC Concentrate - Red cell concentrate (packed red cells) volume is 250-300 ml, consist of 220 ml of packed RBC and 80 ml of plasma. - In which 70–90% of platelets and 99% of white blood cells are removed in the preparation of red cell concentrates. - One unit increase Hb 1gm/dl, PCV 3 L/L. - Store at 1-6 °C - Use mainly to increase RBC mass without risk of volume overload of plasma as in chronic anemia, especially in patient with heart failure. - Classically unit transfuse over 2 hrs  Platelets Concentrate - Collection: from individual units of blood cell apheresis (unit containing at least 5.5 × 1010 platelets) - Dose: each unit increase platelets count 5-10×103, dose 1 unit/10 kg. - Storage: at 20-22 °C for 5-7 days, at 4 °C for 24 hrs - special plastic container, continuous horizontal agitation - Risk of viral present - Indication to control or prevent bleeding associated with thrombocytopenia or dysfunction.  Granulocyte Concentrate - Collection by: Routine donation (buffy coat) - less effective Leucopheresis - more better 3 Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3 - Use in patients with persistent neutropenia and documented to have infection or chemotherapy and failure to respond with antibiotic at 48 hrs until infection diminishes or higher neutrophils. - Because of a rapid decline in granulocyte function during storage, granulocyte concentrates should be stored at room temperature for no longer than 24 hrs of donation.  FFP (fresh frozen plasma) - Collection: Plasma separated from whole blood or apheresis and frozen immediately within 6-8 hrs of collection at -20 °C. - Volume: 200-250 ml. - Storage: at – 20 °C up to 12 months and should be used immediately within 2 hrs after thawing. - Dose: 5-15 ml/kg. - Indications: specific factor deficiency (inherited form), acquired factors deficiency (DIC, liver disease), warfarin overdose, massive transfusion. - Side effect: volume overload, allergy, disease transmission.  Cryoprecipitate - Collection: fresh frozen plasma thawed at 4 °C is then centrifuged and separate the white glutinous precipitate to make the cryoprecipitate - Volume: 10-25 ml. - Storage: at – 20 °C up to 12 months and should be used immediately within 2 hrs after thawing. - Dose: according to use. 4 Dr.Ali Alkhafajy Blood transfusion Lec 3 - Indications: according to the factor required - Side effects: allergy, disease transmission 5

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