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Jeffrey McCullough
Transfusion Medicine
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Страница 1
Table of Contents
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Guide
Pages
Страница 7
Страница 8
Contributors
Preface
1 History
1.1 Ancient times
1.2 The period 1500–1700
1.3 The 1800s
1.4 First transfusions in the United States
1.5 The discovery of blood groups
1.6 Anticoagulation
1.7 Modern blood banking and blood banks
1.8 Cadaver blood
1.9 The Rh blood group system and prevention of Rh immunization
1.10 Coombs and antiglobulin serum
1.11 Plasma and the blood program during World War II
1.12 Plastic bags and blood components
1.13 Cryoprecipitate and factor VIII
1.14 Red cell preservation
1.15 Leukocyte antigens and antibodies
1.16 Platelet collection, storage, and transfusion
1.17 Apheresis
1.18 Granulocyte transfusions
1.19 Summary
References
2 The Blood Supply
2.1 Worldwide blood supply
US blood supply
2.2 Amount of blood collected
Platelet production
Plasma production for transfusion
2.3 Management of the blood supply
2.4 Other activities of community blood centers
2.5 The plasma collection system
Plasma definitions
Federally licensed plasma collection and manufacturing organizations
Plasma collection activity
2.6 Nongovernmental blood bank organizations
AABB, formerly the American Association of Blood Bank
America’s Blood Centers
Plasma Protein Therapeutics Association
2.7 World Health Organization
2.8 Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
2.9 International Society for Blood Transfusion
2.10 Regulation of the blood supply system US Federal Regulation
Other required licensure
Voluntary accreditation of blood banks
College of American Pathologists Accreditation Program
References
3 Recruitment of Blood Donors
3.1 Demographic characteristics of blood donors
Gender
Age
Race/Ethnicity
Education and socioeconomic characteristics
Employment
Other social characteristics
3.2 Motivation of whole blood donors Psychosocial theories applicable to blood donation
Integrated model
Theory of planned behavior
Giving and not giving
3.3 The donation experience and factors that influence continued donation
Social influences on blood donation and social media
Family history of donation or blood use
The donation situation
Organizational influences
Role of incentives
3.4 Whole blood donor recruitment strategies
3.5 Apheresis donor recruitment
3.6 Bone marrow donors
References
4 Blood Donor Medical Assessment, Collection, and Complications
4.1 Blood collection
4.2 Medical assessment of whole blood donors
Registration
Obtaining medical history
Patients with hemochromatosis as blood donors
Physical examination of the blood donor
Special blood donations
4.3 Collection of whole blood
Labeling
Blood bags
Anticoagulant preservative solutions
Selection of the vein and preparation of the venipuncture site
Venipuncture
Blood collection
4.4 Postdonation care and adverse reactions to blood donation Postdonation care
Adverse reactions
Severe reactions to blood donation
Seizures
Nerve injuries
Hematoma, arterial puncture, and thrombosis
4.5 Therapeutic bleeding
4.6 Medical assessment of apheresis donors General assessment
Plateletpheresis donors
Red cell loss
Blood volume shifts
Potential complications of serial donations
Platelet depletion
Leukapheresis donors
Plasmapheresis donors
Allogeneic donors for hematopoietic cell transplantation
Physical examination of apheresis donors
4.7 Adverse reactions in apheresis donors General
Vasovagal reactions
Anticoagulation
Citrate toxicity
Circulatory effects
Air embolus
Hematoma
Mechanical hemolysis
Platelet depletion or damage
Lymphocyte depletion
Complications unique to granulocyte donation
Complications unique to plasmapheresis
Complications unique to mononuclear cell apheresis for collection of peripheral blood stem cells
References
5 Preparation, Storage, and Characteristics of Whole Blood, Blood Components, and Plasma Derivatives
5.1 Whole blood preparation and storage
5.2 Preparation of blood components from whole blood Anticoagulant–preservative solutions
Blood processing for the preparation of components
Red blood cells Description of component
Storage conditions and duration
Frozen or deglycerolized red blood cells Description of component
Washed red cells
Leukocyte‐reduced red blood cells Definition of component
History of leukodepletion
Leukocyte depletion filters
Fresh frozen plasma Description of component
Storage conditions and duration
24‐Hour frozen plasma
Thawing of plasma
Liquid plasma (never frozen) Description of component
5.3 Cryoprecipitate Description of component
Thawing
5.4 Platelet concentrates—whole blood Description of component
Storage conditions and duration
Leukodepletion of platelets
5.5 Granulocytes
5.6 Irradiation of blood components
5.7 Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells
5.8 Plasma derivatives General
Coagulation factor concentrates
Fibrinogen
Immune serum globulins
5.9 Pathogen‐inactivated blood components
Solvent–detergent plasma (Octaplas)
Fresh frozen plasma
Platelets
Red cells
5.10 Universal red cells
Enzymatic cleavage of ABO and Rh antigen
Masking ABO antigens
5.11 Blood substitutes
Potential clinical uses and impact of hemoglobin substitutes
References
6 Production of Components by Apheresis
Intermittent‐flow centrifugation
Continuous‐flow centrifugation
6.1 Apheresis instruments Fresenius Kabi Amicus Separator
Fresenius Kabi Alyx
Terumo Trima Accel
Haemonetics Instruments
6.2 Plateletpheresis Single‐donor platelet concentrates
Function and storage of platelets obtained by apheresis
6.3 Erythrocytapheresis
6.4 Leukapheresis for the collection of granulocytes
Hydroxyethyl starch in leukapheresis
Stimulation of donors with corticosteroid or G‐CSF prior to leukapheresis
Filtration leukapheresis
Function of granulocytes obtained by leukapheresis
Storage of granulocytes for transfusion
Donor–recipient matching for granulocyte transfusion
6.5 Leukapheresis for the collection of mononuclear cells
6.6 Leukapheresis for the collection of peripheral blood stem cells
Collection procedures
Effects of peripheral blood stem cell collection on normal donors
Characteristics of the peripheral blood stem cell concentrates
Quality control of peripheral blood stem cell concentrates
Storage of peripheral blood stem cells
6.7 Donor selection and complications of cytapheresis in normal donors
6.8 Plasmapheresis and source plasma
References
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