administration of blood and blood products

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Administration of Blood and Blood Products PN 3 November 2005

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Administration of Blood and Blood Products. PN 3 November 2005. Donation and Deferrals. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/redgold/index.htm www.bloodservices.ca. Transfusions. Typing and Cross Matching. To determine if blood of donor is compatible with blood or recipient - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Administration of Blood and Blood ProductsPN 3 November 2005

Page 2: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Donation and Deferrals

• http://www.pbs.org/wnet/redgold/index.htm

• www.bloodservices.ca

Page 3: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Transfusions

Page 4: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Typing and Cross Matching

• To determine if blood of donor is compatible with blood or recipient

• If incompatible may result in “clumping” or agglutination and hemolysis of recipients blood cells. This may result in death.

• Typing determines blood type(A, B, AB, O)

• Cross match determines compatibility

Page 5: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Blood group AIf you belong to the blood group A, you have A antigens on the surface of your red blood cells and B antibodies in your blood plasma.

Blood group BIf you belong to the blood group B, you have B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells and A antibodies in your blood plasma.

Blood group ABIf you belong to the blood group AB, you have both A and B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells and no A or B antibodies at all in your blood plasma

Blood group 0If you belong to the blood group 0 (null), you have neither A or B antigens on the surface of your red blood cells but you have both A and B antibodies in your blood plasma

Page 6: Administration of Blood and Blood Products
Page 7: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Agglutinin

• An antibody that causes a “clumping” of specific antigens

• Type A have an A antigen, type B have a B antigen, AB have both A and B antigens; type O have neither A or B

• A types have agglutinin for B; B have Agglutinin for A, AB have none and O has A and B agglutinins

Page 8: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Rh Factor

• Inherited antigen in human blood• There are 5 but we concern ourselves with

the one identified as “D”• A person who is identified as having “D” is

called Rh positive• Rh negative recipient must receive

negative blood• If the receive positive blood future tx may

cause death

Page 9: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Types of Transfusions

• Whole Blood

• Red blood cells

• Platelets

• Plasma

• Cryoprecipitate

Page 10: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Pre-Transfusion

• Agency policy

• Consent

• Hx of previous transfusion

• What symptoms do you want pt to report

Page 11: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Initiating the transfusion

• IV with large bore needle

• Blood tubing primed with 0.9% NaCl

• Blood filter

• Baseline vital

• Have pt. comfortable, i.e. go to bathroom

Page 12: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

During the Transfusion

• Blood not initiated within 30 mins returned to lab

• Infused no longer than 4 hours

• All info on pt and blood must be exactly the same

• Check vital signs q5 mins x 3 and then q15 mins x 4 then hourly

Page 13: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Transfusion Reactions

• Listen to the pts complaints• Check vitals, observe the patientTypes of Reactions:

HemolyticAllergic FebrileBacterial

Circ overload

Page 14: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Hemolytic

• Blood type or Rh incompatibility• Destruction of cells and inflammatory

response• Maybe immediate or at next transfusion• Mild with fever and chills or life threatening• Apprehension, HA, chest pain, low back

pain, Tachycardia, Tachypnea, Hypotension, hemoglobinuria, impending doom

Page 15: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Allergic

• Clients with a history of allergy

• Uticaria, itching, bronchospasm, anaphylaxis.

• Occurs during and up to 24 hours after

• Sometimes given washed RBC to remove WBC and plasma

Page 16: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Febrile

• Occurs after multiple transfusions

• Develop anti WBC antibodies

• Give WBC reduced blood (filter, washed)

• S and S: chills, tachycardia, fever, hypotension, tachypnea

Page 17: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Bacterial

• Contaminated blood transfusion

• Gram negative because these grow fast in blood

• S and S: tachycardia, hypotension, fever, chills, shock

• Onset is rapid

Page 18: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Circulatory Overload

• Blood infused to quickly• Whole blood or multiple infusions• Older adults are most at risk• S and S, hypertension, bounding pulse,

distended jugular veins, dyspnea, restlessness, confusion.

• Manage and prevent by monitoring I & O; infusing slowly, diuretics, chest assessment!

Page 19: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Transfusion-Associated Graft-versus-Host Disease

• Rare but life-threatening

• Immune suppressed individuals

• 90% mortality rate

• Thrombocytopenia, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, chronin hep, wt loss, recurrent infections.

• Occurs 1-2 weeks

Page 20: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

Incidentals

• Blood warmers

• Pumps and pressure bags

• Dilutents and concurrent fluid and meds

Page 21: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

RPN Responsibility

• Pick up blood from blood bank• Prime blood tubing• Confirm client identity with other Registered

Nurses (not another RPN)• Independent double check of all ID• Re-verify the MD order and concent• Time the transfusion• WATCH and ASSESS the patient• Documentation

Page 22: Administration of Blood and Blood Products

What not to Do

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