Background: The goal was to study the effect of early equal-proportion transfusion on the prognosis of trauma patients with bleeding.

Methods: Emergency hospital trauma patients were randomly divided into two groups, a group based on assessment of blood consumption (ABC) to assess whether need to start the massive blood transfusion patients, such as proportion of blood transfusion (fresh frozen plasma: suspended red blood cells = 1:1), and the other group using traditional methods of blood transfusion, namely according to routine blood and clotting function and hemodynamic parameters, to decide when and what blood constituents should be transfused.

Results: The coagulation got better in the early equal-proportion transfusion group, there were significant differences of PT and APTT (p < 0.05). The amount of 24 hours RBC and plasma transfusion was decreased in the early equal-proportion transfusion group, compared to the control group (p < 0.05), the length of ICU stay was shortened, the 24-hours SOFA score was improved, and there was no significant difference in 24-hours mortality, in-hospital mortality and total length of in-hospital stay (p > 0.05).

Conclusions: Early transfusion can reduce the total amount of blood transfusion and shorten ICU time, but has no significant effect on mortality.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.7754/Clin.Lab.2023.221027DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

blood transfusion
16
early equal-proportion
12
equal-proportion transfusion
12
blood
9
transfusion
9
red blood
8
blood cells
8
trauma patients
8
transfusion group
8
early
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!