lef5501 Posted February 17, 2006 Share Posted February 17, 2006 At the moment we have micro Rhig and full dose Rhig available to the Drs. We hardly ever get requests for the mini dose and I just expired three of five vials that we received in Sept 2004. Just wondering if there were any advantages to the mini dose or should I do away with it and just stock the full dose? Any opinions on the subject? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lcsmrz Posted February 19, 2006 Share Posted February 19, 2006 We did away with the micro dose ages ago, but it was partially due to our patient population and the lack of anticipated need. Our OB-GYNs agreed to give full-dose below 12 weeks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John C. Staley Posted February 20, 2006 Share Posted February 20, 2006 We also stopped providing the mini doses years ago. Most docs didn't like being put on the spot telling us just how far along the patient was. It was much easier for everyone to just provide full dose RhIG. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
janet Posted February 21, 2006 Share Posted February 21, 2006 Question....by "micro" do you mean 120uG or 50uG?? "full dose" 300uG??We give 120ug in most "end of pregnancy" situations and 300uG if during pregnancy. I've had requests for the 50uG in early terminations/miscarriages and they have ended up giving a partial 120uG dose.I tried in the past to convince our medical director to only carry the 300uG but didn't succeed....I felt it would save having to ask questions on whether the pregnancy was finished or threatened, etc. Better to overdose than underdose! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
S.Hunt Posted February 22, 2006 Share Posted February 22, 2006 We stopped stocking MICROGAM@ a long time ago for pretty much the same reasons as stated by others. - OB/GYN's not willing to commit on gestational age (especially when close to 12 weeks) - too much RHOGAM@ won't lead to problems in later pregnancies HOWEVER, not giving enough might.I pose another question - How many blood banks follow patients given Rho(D) IgG early on in the pregnancy and thus give Ante Partum Rho(D) IgG before 28 weeks? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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