Objective: to evaluate the impact of acute normovolaemic haemodilution (ANH) on the blood transfusion requirements in elective abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair in a single vascular unit. Methods: thirty-two patients underwent ANH during elective AAA repair between 1992 and 1997. The operation was performed by the same surgeon/anaesthetist team in 75% of cases. Their demographic details, type of aneurysm (infrarenal or supra-renal), preoperative blood cross match, use of intra-operative red cell salvage, blood loss, peri-operative bank blood requirements, pre-op and on-discharge haemoglobin levels and post-operative outcome were recorded. The results were compared to a group of 40 randomly selected patients (to represent the unit average) who underwent elective AAA repair by variable surgeon/anaesthetist teams without ANH in the same time period. Results: there were more supra-renal AAA repairs in the ANH group (8/32) than in the non-ANH group (0/40, p<0.01). ANH patients required significantly less blood transfusion peri-operatively (median 2 units) than the non-ANH patients (median 3 units, p=0.02). There were no other significant differences between the variables measured. Conclusion: these results suggest that a dedicated team can achieve significant reductions in the use of heterologous blood transfusion compared to the vascular unit average experience by the effective use of ANH.
CITATION STYLE
Wolowczyk, L., Lewis, D. R., Nevin, M., Smith, F. C. T., Baird, R. N., & Lamont, P. M. (2001). The effect of acute normovolaemic haemodilution on blood transfusion requirements in abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, 22(4), 361–364. https://doi.org/10.1053/ejvs.2001.1457
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