Mastery Guide · Series I · Limited-Resource Edition
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Blood Transfusion Mastery Guide

From Safety to Survival — The Clinician's Manual for Real-World Transfusion Practice

By Dr. Amir Fadhel
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Mastery Series · Limited-Resource Edition

This guide translates transfusion medicine into actionable, bedside-ready knowledge for resource-limited hospitals — where whole blood remains the backbone, PRBC and FFP supplies fluctuate, and clinical judgment replaces laboratory immediacy. Structured for the OR, ICU, and obstetric theater.

01

Foundations & Fast Orientation

🧠 1.1 — What Transfusion Really Treats

Before reaching for blood, always ask: What am I treating — oxygen debt, coagulation failure, or volume loss?

Transfusion is not a treatment for anemia itself — it's a rescue for oxygen delivery failure.

Pillar 1
O₂-Carrying Capacity
→ Hemoglobin
Pillar 2
Coagulation Support
→ FFP / Cryo / Plt
Pillar 3
Volume Restoration
→ Circulatory stability
Key Concept: A patient with Hb 6 g/dL but stable, warm, and normotensive may tolerate it. A patient with Hb 8 g/dL but cold, hypotensive, and tachycardic may die without transfusion. It's not the number — it's the delivery.

⚙️ 1.2 — Whole Blood vs Components

ComponentVolumeContentsShelf LifeFunction
Whole Blood450 ± 50 mLRBC + plasma + platelets (early)21–35 daysBest for major hemorrhage
PRBC250–300 mLRBCs + small plasma35–42 daysRaises Hb; minimal factors
FFP200–250 mLAll coag factors (no plt)1 year (frozen)Reverses coagulopathy
Cryoprecipitate15–20 mL/unitFibrinogen, VIII, XIII, vWF1 year (frozen)Target fibrinogen <1 g/L
Platelets50–70 mLPlatelets + plasma5 daysStops microvascular bleeding
Storage decay: Platelets gone after 6–8 hours. Factor V and VIII degrade after 5–7 days. K⁺ and lactate rise with age. "Fresh whole blood" (<24 h old) behaves like a balanced transfusion.

🩸 1.3 — Quick Physics of O₂ Delivery

Oxygen Delivery Formula
DO₂ = CO × CaO₂
CaO₂ = (1.34 × Hb × SaO₂) + (0.003 × PaO₂)
If Hb = 5 g/dL → CaO₂ ≈ 6.7 mL/dL — no fluid or pressor can substitute this.

🌍 1.4 — Limited-Resource Mindset

  1. Stabilize First — airway, hemorrhage control, temperature
  2. Transfuse Judiciously — whole blood if active bleeding + pallor + shock
  3. Use FFP Early — replaces lost factors
  4. TXA early in trauma or PPH; Vitamin K for liver-related INR rise
  5. Never Delay for Perfection — "Good blood in time saves life better than perfect blood late."

🧾 1.5 — Ten Rules That Prevent Fatal Errors

RuleClinical Meaning
1️⃣Identify the patient yourself before transfusion — never trust handwriting
2️⃣Check blood group, expiry, integrity in front of a witness
3️⃣Never transfuse untyped blood unless immediately life-threatening
4️⃣Warm blood if rapid transfusion or neonate
5️⃣Record start time, volume, vitals every 15 min
6️⃣Stop immediately for rash, fever, dyspnea, or hypotension
7️⃣Keep IV line with NS only — never mix drugs
8️⃣Calcium gluconate 10% every 3–4 units of blood
9️⃣Maintain core temp >36°C — hypothermia kills coagulation
🔟If doubt: Stop, label, report, preserve the bag

🩺 Mnemonic

"Check–Warm–Watch–Stop–Report" — five actions that define a safe transfusion culture.

02

Compatibility & Testing — Minimal Delay, Maximum Safety

🧬 ABO & Rh Basics

RecipientRBCs Can Receive FromPlasma Can Be Given To
OO onlyAll groups (universal plasma donor)
AA, OA, AB
BB, OB, AB
ABA, B, AB, O (universal recipient)AB only
🔹 O-negative RBCs = universal RBC donor · 🔹 AB plasma = universal plasma donor
In obstetric or childbearing-age women: O-negative only — Rh sensitization is permanent.

🧪 Type & Screen vs Crossmatch

TestPurposeTimeResult Meaning
Type & ScreenDetermines ABO/Rh + unexpected antibodies~15–30 minPatient profile known; no blood selected yet
CrossmatchTests patient plasma against donor RBCs~45–60 minConfirms safe donor–recipient pairing

🚨 Emergency Release — When Every Second Counts

  • Adult male or postmenopausal female: O-positive blood
  • Female of childbearing age / children: O-negative blood
  • Massive bleed: freshest whole blood available if delay exceeds 20–30 min

🕒 Golden Rule

"If you can type and crossmatch in <10 min, wait. If the patient will die in <10 min, transfuse."

🔄 Switching from O to Type-Specific Safely

  1. Stop O supply as soon as type-specific units are available
  2. Never mix O with another type simultaneously — always flush with NS between types
  3. Monitor first 15 minutes carefully — delayed hemolysis may appear subtle
  4. Confirm group twice from separate samples before switching

📋 Summary — Emergency Compatibility Quick Reference

SituationPreferred BloodAlternativeNotes
Exsanguinating adult maleO⁺ whole bloodAny fresh whole bloodRecord Rh status
Exsanguinating female (fertile)O⁻ whole bloodO⁺ + Anti-D laterNever skip documentation
Known group, crossmatch pendingType-specific bloodO same RhFlush line with NS
Neonate (exchange)O⁻, CMV-safeO⁻ screenedWarm to 37°C
FFP shortageFFP same ABOAB plasmaMinimum volume
03

Components & Dosing You Actually Have

ComponentAdult DosePediatric DoseNeonate DoseExpected Effect
Whole Blood1 U ≈ 450 mL10–15 mL/kg10–15 mL/kg↑ Hb ≈ 1 g/dL per 10 mL/kg
PRBC1 U → Hb ↑ ~1 g/dL10–15 mL/kg10–15 mL/kg↑ Hb ≈ 1 g/dL
FFP10–20 mL/kg10–15 mL/kg10–15 mL/kgINR ≤ 1.5
Cryoprecipitate10 U (≈2–4 g fibrinogen)1 U / 10 kg5 mL/kg↑ fibrinogen ≈ 0.5–1 g/L
Platelets1 pool (4–6 U)1 U / 10 kg10 mL/kg↑ plt ≈ 30–50 ×10⁹/L
Ca-gluconate 10%10 mL IV q3–4 U0.3 mL/kg0.3 mL/kgiCa²⁺ > 1.0 mmol/L

❄️ No Platelets — Working Solutions

ProblemWhat You Can DoWhy It HelpsCaveats
Microvascular ooze, no plateletsFresh whole blood (<24 h old)Supplies early platelets + factorsCheck age; warm infusion
HypofibrinogenemiaCryo 10 U → target ≥1.5–2.0 g/LRestores fibrin scaffoldWatch volume
Ongoing fibrinolysisTXA early (or aminocaproic)Stabilizes clotAvoid in sepsis DIC
Uremic/antiplatelet dysfunctionDDAVP 0.3 µg/kg IVBoosts vWF → platelet adhesionShort-lived 6–8 h
Dilutional coagulopathyFFP 15–20 mL/kgReplaces broad factorsWatch volume + add cryo
Lethal triadWarm + pH + Ca²⁺Restores enzyme functionMonitor iCa²⁺ and temp

🧰 Adjuncts That Actually Help

  • Vitamin K: 10 mg IV slow (≥30 min) — for warfarin/liver/cholestasis
  • Calcium gluconate 10%: 10 mL IV q3–4 units; or CaCl₂ 1 g central for severe hypocalcemia
  • DDAVP: 0.3 µg/kg IV over 20–30 min — uremia or antiplatelet effect
  • rFVIIa (rescue only): 90 µg/kg IV — only after surgical control + targets met
  • Aminocaproic acid: antifibrinolytic fallback when TXA unavailable
04

Indications & Thresholds — Adult · Pediatric · Neonatal

Clinical ContextHb Trigger (g/dL)Rationale
Stable, non-bleeding ICU<7Restrictive strategy safe
Active hemorrhage / shock<8 or symptomaticHb less relevant; use physiology
Sepsis or major surgery<8Reduced tissue hypoxia tolerance
Acute coronary syndrome<9Avoid myocardial O₂ debt
Head injury / neurocritical care8–9Maintain cerebral perfusion
Pregnancy / postpartum hemorrhage<7 (≥8 if unstable)Consider fetal O₂ + uterine tone
💡 Principle: In bleeding, transfuse for physiology, not for numbers. Monitor mental status, skin perfusion, lactate, and urine output.

🔹 Coagulation Targets During Bleeding

ParameterTargetWhat to Give if Below
INR≤1.5–1.7FFP 15–20 mL/kg
Fibrinogen≥1.5–2.0 g/LCryo 10 U adult / 1 U/10 kg
Platelets≥50×10⁹/L (≥100 for neuro)Platelets or WB+FFP if absent
Temperature≥36°CWarm fluids, blankets
Ionized Ca²⁺>1.0 mmol/LCa-gluconate 10 mL 10% q3–4 U

👶 Pediatric & Neonatal Dose Wheel

Weight (kg)PRBC (mL)FFP (mL)Cryo (mL)
5505020
1010010040
2020020080
30300300120
40400400160
🍼 Neonatal blood volume ≈ 80–100 mL/kg. Always use infusion pump and blood warmer. Reassess after every 10 mL/kg — children respond fast and can be easily overloaded.
05

Massive Hemorrhage Protocol (MHP) — Low-Supply Hospitals

🛎️ Activate MHP Immediately — No Lab Needed

  • SBP <90 or MAP <65 + tachycardia; Shock Index >1.0 (HR/SBP)
  • EBL >150 mL/min — soaked pads, pooling, watery suction
  • ≥2 units in 30 min or >4 units anticipated
  • Obstetrics: PPH >1000 mL with ongoing bleed, atony unresponsive, PAS rupture
  • DIC signs: oozing from lines + mucosal bleeding + poor clot formation

Rule: Don't wait for INR or fibrinogen. Activate, then refine.

🩸 Strategy — Whole-Blood-Forward vs 1:1:1

Cycle A (Whole Blood Available)
1 unit WB → 1 unit FFP → 1 unit WB → 1 unit FFP (repeat)
Add Cryo 10 U early → target fibrinogen ≥1.5–2.0 g/L
Cycle B (PRBC + FFP Only)
PRBC : FFP = 1:1 until bleeding slows, then add Cryo
Avoid PRBC-only spirals → dilutional coagulopathy worsens hemorrhage

⏱️ TXA — Give Early or Not at All

  • Trauma: 1 g IV over 10 min → 1 g over 8 h. Must start ≤3 h from injury.
  • PPH: 1 g IV over 10 min → repeat 1 g if bleeding continues after 30 min or restarts within 24 h. Start ≤3 h from birth.
  • Aminocaproic fallback: 4–5 g IV load over 1 h → 1 g/h for 8 h

🧊⚡🧪 The Lethal Triad — Make It Fixable

Triad ElementFix
Hypothermia (<36°C)Warm all blood/fluids (37–40°C), forced-air blanket, raise OR temp. Every 1°C drop impairs enzymes.
Hypocalcemia (citrate)Ca-gluconate 10% 10 mL IV q3–4 units (iCa²⁺ target >1.0 mmol/L). CaCl₂ 1 g via central if crashing.
Acidosis (pH <7.2)Stop the bleed, ventilate adequately, perfuse with blood/FFP/cryo. Bicarb only if pH ≲7.1 after source control.

🧠 Mantra

Warm → Calcium → pH — restore the clotting environment first.

🗂️ MHP Quick Cards

🟦 OR

  • Call MHP; announce time zero
  • Pack/Clamp/Compress; assign hemostasis lead
  • Start Cycle A or B; TXA now; Cryo early
  • Warm patient and blood; Ca²⁺ after 3–4 units
  • Reassess q10 min: BP, UO, mental status, lactate

🟩 ER

  • Two large-bore IVs; send type & screen (bedside label)
  • Activate TXA + Cycle A/B; whole blood if available
  • Warming blanket + fluid warmer; Ca²⁺ protocol
  • Prepare transfer to OR/ICU; keep running totals

🟧 ICU

  • Confirm ongoing source; surgical call if re-bleed
  • Continue balanced replacement + cryo to targets
  • MAP ≥65 with blood first; vasopressors only after volume
  • Labs if available; but don't wait to treat

⛔ Stop Criteria

  • SBP/MAP stable without escalating pressors
  • Bleeding visibly slowed/stopped; suction clears
  • Skin perfusion improves; UO ≥0.5 mL/kg/h
  • Lactate falling; if labs: fibrinogen ≥1.5 g/L, INR ≤1.5, iCa²⁺ >1.0, T ≥36°C
06

Obstetric Hemorrhage — PAS, Rupture, Atony

Cause (4Ts)MechanismClassic Clues
Tone (Atony)Uterine muscle fails to contractSoft boggy uterus, blood gush
TissueRetained placenta/membranesFragments on inspection, US
TraumaGenital tract or uterine tearsBright red bleeding, firm uterus
ThrombinCoagulopathy (DIC, HELLP, sepsis)Oozing, non-clotting blood
🩺 At Stage 2 (continuing bleed + tachycardia/pallor), activate MHP immediately. Waiting until Stage 3 is how PPH becomes mortality.

🩸 Intra-operative Playbook

StepActionKey Detail
1️⃣TXA 1 g IV before/at incisionRepeat once after 30 min if bleeding continues
2️⃣Early whole blood (fresh)1 WB ↔ 1 FFP cycle
3️⃣Cryo after 2 cycles10 U adult (1 U/10 kg)
4️⃣Ca²⁺ replacement10 mL 10% Ca-gluconate q3–4 units WB
5️⃣Warm everything37–40°C blood + forced air
6️⃣Monitor fibrinogen visually"Watery" blood → give cryo + FFP

📊 Fibrinogen in Obstetrics — The Early Marker

In PPH, fibrinogen <2 g/L predicts progression to severe hemorrhage. Replace to ≥2 g/L early (10 U cryo ≈ 2–4 g fibrinogen). If cryo unavailable: FFP 15–20 mL/kg + TXA + Vitamin K 10 mg IV.

🩺 When Hysterectomy Is the Blood-Sparing Choice

Failed tone + no cryo/platelets + invasion → do not delay. Decision ideally <60 min from PPH recognition. Subtotal hysterectomy faster. Document indication and debrief family with empathy.

⚖️ In obstetric hemorrhage, saving the woman is the first act of motherhood.
07

Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

DIC is not a disease — it's the body's desperate, dying attempt to clot and bleed at once. Clots form everywhere, consuming factors and platelets → then bleeding erupts from everywhere.

🩸 Clinical Recognition Before Labs

Bedside ClueInterpretation
Persistent oozing from IV/surgical sitesEarly microvascular consumption
Watery, non-clotting blood in suctionFactor depletion (esp. fibrinogen)
Petechiae / ecchymoses / mucosal bleedingPlatelet collapse
Darkening fingertips, acrocyanosisMicrothrombi formation
Falling BP despite transfusionCapillary leak, shock coagulopathy
Mnemonic: Ooze + Watery Blood + Shock = Treat for DIC. Do not wait for INR or fibrinogen report.

🧪 Lab Confirmation

ParameterDIC TrendTypical Cutoff
Platelet countFalling<100 ×10⁹/L
PT / INRProlongedINR >1.5–2.0
FibrinogenDecreased<1.0 g/L
D-dimer / FDPsMarkedly ↑>5× normal
Blood filmSchistocytesFragmented cells

🧬 DIC vs Dilutional vs Liver Failure

FeatureDICDilutionalLiver Failure
OnsetAcute (hours)During resuscitationGradual (days)
Platelets↓↓↓↓ or normal
Fibrinogen↓↓↓ (<1 g/L)Normal / ↑
D-dimerVery ↑↑↑Mild ↑
TXA useOnly trauma/PPH typeConsiderAvoid

🧰 Bedside Algorithm — Treat While Labs Cook

  1. Identify: Bleeding + oozing + watery blood
  2. Treat trigger: deliver, debride, or drain
  3. Start FFP 15–20 mL/kg
  4. Add Cryo 10 U if fibrinogen <1.5 g/L suspected
  5. Use fresh WB if platelets absent
  6. Calcium + warmth + pH control
  7. TXA only in trauma-type or early obstetric pattern — avoid in sepsis DIC
  8. Reassess q30–60 min

🧬 Validated Bedside Coagulation Tests

20-Minute Whole Blood Clotting Test (20WBCT)

2 mL fresh venous blood into a clean, dry glass tube at room temp. Check at 20 minutes. No clot = severe coagulopathy/defibrination → urgent fibrinogen/FFP replacement. Validated by WHO snakebite management guidelines.

Warm Glass-Tube Test (7-min field standard)

2 mL venous blood in dry glass tube; hold warm in fist (~37°C); tip gently at 4 min, then every minute. Failure to clot by 7–8 min or friable clot → start FFP 15–20 mL/kg ± cryo. Must use glass, not plastic.

Excluded as non-validated: Paper-drop/halo test · Earlobe bleeding time (Duke/Ivy) — both unreliable and not predictive of peri-hemorrhage risk.
08

Transfusion Reactions — See It, Stop It, Fix It

First 60 Seconds — Universal Algorithm

STOP transfusion → KEEP IV open with NSCALL for helpCHECK patient ID & bagASSESS ABCs

📋 Stop–Check–Support–Notify

  1. STOP transfusion (leave line in)
  2. CHECK identifiers (patient, unit, group, expiry, integrity)
  3. SUPPORT ABCs: oxygen, IV fluids, epinephrine kit ready
  4. NOTIFY blood bank: send post-reaction sample, DAT, hemolysis labs, urinalysis, culture
  5. DOCUMENT vitals q15 min; save bag/tubing

🧭 Bedside Triage by Dominant Sign

Dominant SignFirst ThoughtsNext Actions
Fever/chills within 1–2 hFNHTR vs sepsis vs hemolysisStop; antipyretic; culture + DAT + hemolysis labs
Hypotension + back/chest painAcute hemolytic until proven otherwiseStop; NS bolus; urine >1 mL/kg/h; labs + DAT
Dyspnea + hypoxemiaTRALI vs TACO (see below)Stop; CXR; ABG; diuretics only if TACO
Urticaria/itchingMild allergicStop; antihistamine; may restart if resolved
Wheezing/stridor/hypotensionAnaphylaxisIM epinephrine 0.3–0.5 mg; airway; steroids
Fever >39°C, rigors, shockSeptic reactionStop; broad-spectrum Abx; culture unit + patient; ICU

🌬️ TRALI vs TACO — The Bedside Split

FeatureTRALITACO
BPNormal/lowHigh or rising
JVP/EdemaUsually normalElevated JVP, S3, peripheral edema
FeverCommonRare
CXRBilateral non-cardiogenic edemaCardiogenic edema
BNPUsually normalElevated
DiureticsMinimal responseImproves
TreatmentSupportive ventilation; avoid diureticsIV furosemide; slow future transfusions
09

Special Populations & Ethics in Scarcity

ScenarioHb TargetFirst MoveAdd-OnsRed Flags
ACS/ischemia8–9Split RBC aliquots 150–200 mLDiuretic coverTACO risk
Frail elderly7–8 (context)Slow, warm transfusionCa²⁺ q3–4 UFluid overload
Chronic ICU anemia~7Investigate / IV ironAvoid reflex RBCMissed bleeding
Liver failure bleedFibrinogen → ≥1.5–2.0 g/L firstFFP 10–15 mL/kg, Vit KVolume overload
Jehovah's WitnessTXA + meticulous hemostasisFactor/fibrinogen concentrates if acceptedConsent clarity
Neuraxial planCheck plt/INR/fibrinogenDelay if lowEpidural hematoma

⚖️ Triage Ethics — Who Gets O⁻ vs O⁺

  1. Greatest immediate survival benefit — physiology over first-come
  2. Protect the future: O⁻ reserved for women of childbearing potential and children; O⁺ for adult males/postmenopausal
  3. Proportionality & review: senior clinician + blood bank jointly log the decision
  4. Equity: no discrimination by social status, ability to pay, or non-clinical traits
  5. If only one O⁻ unit left + two exsanguinating patients → prioritize fertile female/child; give O⁺ to adult male

🕊️ Jehovah's Witness Pathways

  • Document wishes (signed form). Ask which fractions are acceptable (many accept albumin, clotting factors, cell-saver sometimes)
  • Optimize pre-op: iron, B12, folate, EPO if time allows
  • Intra-op: meticulous hemostasis, TXA, topical hemostats, hypotensive anesthesia where safe
  • Minimize phlebotomy post-op; pediatric micro-tubes
10

Logistics, Stewardship & Quality Assurance

🧮 Cold-Chain Integrity

ComponentStorage TempTransport / Post-Thaw
RBC / Whole Blood2–6°CValidated coolers + ice packs; start within 30 min of leaving fridge
FFP / Cryo (frozen)≤−18°CPost-thaw FFP 1–6°C ≤24 h; pooled Cryo at RT ≤6 h
Platelets20–24°C with agitation≤5 days; never refrigerate

📉 Monthly Audit — Five Behaviors

IndicatorTarget
% bedside samples correctly labeled≥99.5%
% transfusions with documented indication≥95%
Reaction rate per 1,000 units<3
MHP activation → time-to-first-unit≤10–15 min
Return discard rate from theater/wards<2%
11

Checklists, Calculators & Tear-Outs

🧮 Fibrinogen & Cryo Quick-Math

Fibrinogen Deficit Calculation
Fibrinogen deficit (g) = (Target − Measured) × Plasma Volume (L)
Plasma Volume ≈ 40 mL/kg
1 bag cryo ≈ 200–250 mg fibrinogen
Dose (U) = [weight × (Target − Measured)] ÷ 0.25
Example: 70 kg, fibrinogen 0.8 → target 2.0 → ≈10 U pool

💉 TXA / Aminocaproic Ladder

DrugAdultPediatricNotes
TXA1 g IV over 10 min → repeat 1 g (≤3 h window)15 mg/kg IVDo NOT give >3 h post-trauma/PPH
Aminocaproic4–5 g IV load → 1 g/h infusion100 mg/kg load → 33 mg/kg/hBackup if TXA unavailable

🔍 Visual EBL Aids

Visual CueApprox. Loss
1 fully soaked 30×30 cm pad≈250 mL
1 surgical towel saturated≈400 mL
Blood pooling 10 cm diameter on floor≈500 mL
1 full suction canister (1000 mL)1 L
"Paint-brush" arterial spray>150 mL/min
Use weighed pads when possible: 1 g = 1 mL blood.

🧭 10-Point "Before You Hang Blood"

  1. 1. Verify patient ID (two clinicians)
  2. 2. Check unit type, group, expiry, appearance
  3. 3. Baseline vitals
  4. 4. Document indication
  5. 5. Warm line & blood if rapid/large
  6. 6. Have reaction drugs at hand
  7. 7. Set NS only (no LR/D5)
  8. 8. Inform team of start time
  9. 9. Monitor q15 min first hour
  10. 10. Record stop time + unit number
12

Case-Based Mastery — Five High-Yield Scenarios

Case 1 · Twin Atony — No Platelets On Site

District OR — Inventory: Fresh WB ×4, FFP ×6, no platelets, cryo in 40 min

T0: Boggy uterus, EBL 1200 mL, HR 128, MAP 58. T+2: Oxytocin + TXA 1 g IV. T+5: MHP → WB:FFP 1:1. T+15: Watery suction → Cryo 10 U ordered + Ca-gluconate. T+35: Cryo given, temp 36.2°C — bleeding slows.

Key lessons: Early TXA + fresh WB + cryo anticipated before labs. No PRBC-only spiral. Calcium and warming started with first cycle.

Case 2 · Percreta in District OR — Pre-Planned Path Saves Life

Elective PAS — Stock: WB ×6, FFP ×8, Cryo ×10

Pre-op: Two large-bore IVs, warmers ready, TXA 1 g before incision. Intra-op: Placenta left in situ → subtotal hysterectomy decision early. WB:FFP 1:1 throughout; Cryo after 2 cycles. EBL 2200 mL, MAP stable, no DIC.

Key lessons: Scheduled emergency mindset. No piecemeal dissection. Pre-committed to hysterectomy for blood-sparing.

Case 3 · Polytrauma Unknown Type — When to Switch to Type-Specific

32yo male MVC — Blood bank: O⁺ WB ×4, O⁻ WB ×2, A⁺ available in 20 min

T0: O⁺ WB started (adult male). T+12: FFP alternated 1:1. T+25: Typed A⁺ confirmed on second sample → switch to A⁺ WB after NS flush. T+40: TXA 1 g IV (still within window). No hemolytic reaction.

Key lessons: O⁺ acceptable for exsanguinating adult male. Switch only after two confirmations + line flush. Never mix O and A simultaneously.

Case 4 · Sepsis-DIC in ICU — Bleeding with Rising Lactate

58yo female, septic shock, oozing lines, watery suction, labs delayed

T0: Clinical DIC → FFP 15 mL/kg + warmth + Ca²⁺. T+10: Warm glass-tube test → friable clot at 8 min → Cryo 10 U. T+40: Oozing slows, UO improves. Labs later: fibrinogen 0.9 → 1.7 g/L.

Key lessons: Treat while labs cook. No TXA (sepsis-driven DIC). Hemostasis-first approach. Fibrinogen correction reversed microvascular bleed.

Case 5 · Neonatal Exchange — Resource-Thin Nursery

3-day-old, hemolytic disease, critical bilirubin — O⁻ CMV-safe blood available

160–180 mL/kg via umbilical catheter. PRBC:Plasma 1:1 (WB unavailable). Ca-gluconate 100 mg/kg in divided doses. Monitor K⁺, glucose, temp throughout. No bradycardia or hypothermia complications.

Key lessons: Exchange = logistics + physiology: warmth, calcium, glucose, balanced blood. Pause if bradycardia or K⁺ rising.

13

15 High-Difficulty MCQs

1. In PPH (EBL 2.5 L), "watery" suction blood is seen, fibrinogen 0.8 g/L, no platelets. Most effective immediate step?
  • A. Give TXA 1 g IV and wait for lab confirmation
  • B. Transfuse 2 U PRBCs rapidly
  • C. Administer 10 U cryoprecipitate + continue WB:FFP 1:1
  • D. Give Vitamin K 10 mg IV
2. A 60yo man with septic shock shows oozing at IV sites. Which bedside test best confirms DIC in a rural setting?
  • A. 20-min whole blood clotting test (20WBCT)
  • B. Bleeding time (Duke)
  • C. Filter-paper halo
  • D. Earlobe pin-prick
3. During massive transfusion, the most reliable indicator to decide when to give calcium is:
  • A. Serum total calcium <8 mg/dL
  • B. Ionized Ca²⁺ <1.0 mmol/L or after every 3–4 U blood
  • C. ECG QTc prolongation
  • D. pH <7.2
4. Trauma patient: 6 U PRBCs, no plasma, INR 2.5, fibrinogen 0.9 g/L, no platelets. Best next action?
  • A. Continue PRBCs until Hb normalizes
  • B. Give FFP 15 mL/kg + Cryo 10 U immediately
  • C. Give TXA 1 g IV only
  • D. Start heparin infusion
5. Regarding 1:1:1 resuscitation in low-resource hospitals, which statement is TRUE?
  • A. It cannot be applied without platelets
  • B. Whole blood + FFP cycles mimic 1:1:1 when platelets are absent
  • C. It should start only after labs confirm INR >1.5
  • D. It requires cold platelets to be effective
6. A 75yo with diastolic HF needs 1 U PRBC for Hb 6.8. Best practice?
  • A. Transfuse entire unit rapidly
  • B. Split unit into 150–200 mL aliquots with diuretic cover
  • C. Give TXA prophylactically
  • D. Warm the patient only if cold
7. Patient develops acute dyspnea + hypotension 30 min into transfusion. CXR: bilateral infiltrates, BNP normal. Diagnosis?
  • A. TACO
  • B. TRALI
  • C. FNHTR
  • D. AHTR
8. Which therapy should be AVOIDED in sepsis-driven DIC with microthrombi?
  • A. FFP
  • B. Cryoprecipitate
  • C. TXA
  • D. Calcium supplementation
9. Two patients: 30yo female + 60yo male, both exsanguinating. Only 2 U O⁻ and 6 U O⁺ WB available. Who gets which?
  • A. Both O⁻
  • B. Female O⁺, male O⁻
  • C. Female O⁻, male O⁺
  • D. Random allocation
10. Patient's INR remains 2.2 after 4 U FFP but fibrinogen <1 g/L. What's next?
  • A. Additional FFP
  • B. Cryoprecipitate 10 U
  • C. Vitamin K 10 mg IV
  • D. TXA 1 g IV
11. Which transfusion practice most reduces risk of acute hemolytic reaction?
  • A. Warming blood to 37°C
  • B. Use of leukoreduced units
  • C. Two-person bedside ID check before hanging
  • D. Giving diuretics with each unit
12. In neonatal exchange transfusion, which combination best mimics whole blood when WB unavailable?
  • A. PRBC : FFP = 1:1
  • B. PRBC : NS = 1:1
  • C. PRBC : Cryo = 2:1
  • D. PRBC : FFP : Cryo = 2:1:1
13. In a bleeding cirrhotic, the most predictive trigger for cryo is:
  • A. INR >2
  • B. Fibrinogen <1.5 g/L
  • C. Platelet <100 ×10⁹/L
  • D. PT >18 s
14. After 8 U cold blood rapidly: pH 7.05, iCa²⁺ 0.7, temp 34°C. First corrective priority?
  • A. Sodium bicarbonate infusion
  • B. Active warming + IV calcium replacement
  • C. TXA 1 g IV
  • D. Dopamine infusion
15. 25yo obstetric patient: atony, fibrinogen 1 g/L, INR 1.6, Hb 6 g/dL. Stock: WB ×3, FFP ×3, no cryo. Best strategy?
  • A. Transfuse PRBCs only
  • B. Whole blood + FFP alternating, TXA 1 g IV
  • C. Wait for cryo delivery before transfusion
  • D. Give Vit K and monitor

📋 Answer Key

1C
2A
3B
4B
5B
6B
7B
8C
9C
10B
11C
12A
13B
14B
15B

Explanations

Q1 → C
Low fibrinogen is the earliest critical deficit; cryo + balanced WB/FFP restores clot architecture before PRBCs or Vit K help.
Q2 → A
20WBCT detects incoagulable blood (defibrination); all others are non-validated or obsolete.
Q3 → B
Ionized calcium, not total Ca, reflects citrate toxicity; routine 10 mL 10% Ca-gluconate q3–4 U prevents coagulopathy.
Q4 → B
Dilutional coagulopathy; balanced replacement with factors and fibrinogen is lifesaving.
Q5 → B
WB + FFP approximates balanced resuscitation by providing red cells + factors + early platelets.
Q6 → B
Slow, aliquoted transfusion with loop diuretic prevents TACO in frail cardiac patients.
Q7 → B
TRALI = non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema within 6 h, normal BNP, minimal diuretic response.
Q8 → C
TXA may worsen microvascular thrombosis in sepsis DIC; use only in trauma-type fibrinolytic DIC.
Q9 → C
O⁻ preserved for women of childbearing potential; O⁺ is safe for adult males.
Q10 → B
Persistent coagulopathy with low fibrinogen → cryo provides concentrated fibrinogen; FFP volume alone insufficient.
Q11 → C
Misidentification causes most fatal hemolytic events.
Q12 → A
Equal PRBC + FFP restores both cells and factors for safe neonatal exchange.
Q13 → B
Fibrinogen deficit is the earliest and most correctable defect in liver-related bleeding.
Q14 → B
Hypocalcemia + hypothermia complete the lethal triad; both must be corrected before further products.
Q15 → B
WB + FFP approximates 1:1:1 balance; TXA controls fibrinolysis while awaiting cryo.

🧠 Clinical Reflection

The mark of mastery isn't transfusing fast — it's transfusing right. Repeat these scenarios in drills until "WB ↔ FFP ↔ Cryo + TXA + Ca²⁺ + Warmth" becomes muscle memory.

Knowledge is the only transfusion that multiplies. Share it.