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comment_82129

If you have patient who develops hives during transfusion do you stop the transfusion and perform a Transfusion reaction work up or how do you handle it?

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  • We tell our clinicians to do exactly that, yes. Likely it won't turn into an anaphylactic event, but it could, so STOP and initiate a transfusion workup. Give benadryl and watch the patient. For

  • Yes, the same unit.   once it is hung it is good for 4 hrs.    No need to use a new blood  product.    limit donor exposure. 

  • We stop the transfusion and initiate the transfusion reaction procedure. And until the workup is complete (minus any micro), the patient is unable to receive any other products. Normally it is just so

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comment_82130

We tell our clinicians to do exactly that, yes. Likely it won't turn into an anaphylactic event, but it could, so STOP and initiate a transfusion workup. Give benadryl and watch the patient.

For future transfusions, pre-treat with benadryl - even though it's likely a response to that one specific donor's plasma proteins, and a bag from a different donor may not provoke a reaction.

comment_82135

The Dr. will stop the transfusion and administer benadryl an resume transfusion.  we do not  perform a Transfusion reaction work up, we only document the reaction for our data.  

comment_82140
13 hours ago, cheru26 said:

The Dr. will stop the transfusion and administer benadryl an resume transfusion.  

For resuming transfusion, do you mean resume the blood which caused reaction or another unit of blood?

comment_82141

We stop the transfusion and initiate the transfusion reaction procedure. And until the workup is complete (minus any micro), the patient is unable to receive any other products. Normally it is just something with the donor plasma and Benadryl should cover and propholactically thereafter prior to transfusion. Normally the physicians order Tylenol before the transfusions, so adding Benadryl is not an issue.

comment_82142
1 hour ago, MAGNUM said:

We stop the transfusion and initiate the transfusion reaction procedure. And until the workup is complete (minus any micro), the patient is unable to receive any other products. Normally it is just something with the donor plasma and Benadryl should cover and propholactically thereafter prior to transfusion. Normally the physicians order Tylenol before the transfusions, so adding Benadryl is not an issue.

Same policy, here.

comment_82152
7 hours ago, yan xia said:

For resuming transfusion, do you mean resume the blood which caused reaction or another unit of blood?

Yes, the same unit.   once it is hung it is good for 4 hrs.    No need to use a new blood  product.    limit donor exposure. 

comment_82169
On 6/25/2021 at 5:41 PM, cheru26 said:

Yes, the same unit.   once it is hung it is good for 4 hrs.    No need to use a new blood  product.    limit donor exposure. 

Ditto!

comment_82173
On 6/26/2021 at 5:41 AM, cheru26 said:

Yes, the same unit.   once it is hung it is good for 4 hrs.    No need to use a new blood  product.    limit donor exposure. 

Thanks for your explanation.

I guess  there must be some measures be taken to prevent the opening system to be contaminated, would you please share it with me?

comment_82186

It certainly does not hurt to stop the unit causing the transfusion reaction, start Benadryl and, if the pt needs more  units, start a new unit that they probably/maybe won't have a reaction to - especially if it is FFP being transfused (which is what you have the most "urticaria only" reactions to anyway).  We work them up with an abbreviated Transfusion Reaction workup and issue a new unit.

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