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Cell salvage techniques and obstetric haemorrhage. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The rise in postpartum haemorrhage over the last decade is linked to factors like older maternal age, multiple births, obesity, and increased interventions, leading to more women needing blood transfusions.
  • Blood transfusions, while lifesaving, carry risks such as infections and immune reactions.
  • Intraoperative cell salvage and autotransfusion of vaginally shed blood are recommended as safe, cost-effective alternatives, particularly for those who refuse transfusions for personal or religious reasons, and should influence birth planning decisions.

Article Abstract

Over the last decade, the incidence of postpartum haemorrhage has risen because of increasing maternal age at time of delivery, multiple births, obesity and increased obstetric interventions, resulting in most of these women requiring blood transfusions. While lifesaving, blood transfusion is not without risk. Recipients may rarely develop transfusion-transmitted infections or suffer immunological sequelae. Intraoperative cell salvage is recommended by several national policy making organisations as a safe cost-effective alternative to autologous blood transfusion in both emergency and elective settings. Moreover, emerging data has also revealed that autotransfusion of vaginally shed blood is both feasible and safe. These techniques are useful in patients who decline blood transfusions for both personal and religious reasons and should therefore be taken into consideration when planning place of birth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01443615.2024.2394532DOI Listing

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