Upper airway oedema following autologous blood transfusion from a wound drainage system

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Abstract

We report a case of a 70-yr-old white woman who underwent a revision of a total hip arthroplasty under general anaesthesia. The intraoperative course was stable without any complications and the estimated blood loss was 2500 ml. The patient received an autologous transfusion of blood from a wound drainage system in the recovery room. The transfusion was followed immediately by marked respiratory distress and upper airway oedema. She required emergency tracheal intubation and mechanical pulmonary ventilation. A coagulopathy also developed which was treated and resolved within 12 hr of the capillary leak phenomenon. The trachea was extubated on the first postoperative day and she had an uneventful course until discharge from the hospital two days later. We discuss the possible, aetiology of such a reaction to autologous blood including complement and platelet activation. It is suggested that reinfusion ofnonwashed shed blood from a wound drainage system may present a hazard even though the fluid was autologous in origin. © 1992 Canadian Anesthesiologists.

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APA

Woda, R., & Tetzlaff, J. E. (1992). Upper airway oedema following autologous blood transfusion from a wound drainage system. Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 39(3), 290–292. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03008792

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