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  2. Transfusion-associated circulatory overload - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfusion-associated...

    In transfusion medicine, transfusion-associated circulatory overload (aka TACO) is a transfusion reaction (an adverse effect of blood transfusion) resulting in signs or symptoms of excess fluid in the circulatory system (hypervolemia) within 12 hours after transfusion. [2]

  3. Blood transfusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_transfusion

    The global demand is much higher and there is an unmet need for safe blood for transfusion in many low- and middle-income countries. [75] In the United States, blood transfusions were performed nearly 3 million times during hospitalizations in 2011, making it the most common procedure performed.

  4. Plasma frozen within 24 hours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_frozen_within_24_hours

    Plasma frozen within 24 hours after phlebotomy, commonly called FP24, [1] PF‑24, or similar names, is a frozen human blood plasma product used in transfusion medicine. It differs from fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) in that it is frozen within 24 hours of blood collection, whereas FFP is frozen within 8 hours. The phrase "FFP" is sometimes used to ...

  5. Fresh frozen plasma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fresh_frozen_plasma

    For people with a blood clotting disorder and receive a planned invasive non-cardiac procedure it is not certain if prophylactic plasma transfusions improve all-cause mortality up to 30 days, major bleeding within 24 hours, number of transfusions per participants within one week, number of individuals requiring a transfusion within one week and ...

  6. Whole blood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whole_blood

    It is used in the treatment of massive bleeding, in exchange transfusion, and when people donate blood to themselves (autologous transfusion). [1] [2] One unit of whole blood (approximately 450 mL) increases hemoglobin levels by about 10 g/L. [3] [4] Cross matching is typically done before the blood is given. [2] [5] It is given by injection ...

  7. Platelet transfusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platelet_transfusion

    A review in people with blood cancers compared different platelet transfusion doses. [21] This review found no difference in the number of people who had clinically significant bleeding between platelet transfusions that contained a small number of platelets (low dose – 1.1 x 10 11 /m 2 ) and those that contained an intermediate number of ...

  8. Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acute_hemolytic...

    An acute hemolytic transfusion reaction (AHTR), also called immediate hemolytic transfusion reaction, is a life-threatening reaction to receiving a blood transfusion. AHTRs occur within 24 hours of the transfusion and can be triggered by a few milliliters of blood. The reaction is triggered by host antibodies destroying donor red blood cells ...

  9. Transfusion-related acute lung injury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfusion-related_acute...

    It is often impossible to distinguish TRALI from acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The typical presentation of TRALI is the sudden development of shortness of breath, severe hypoxemia (O 2 saturation <90% in room air), low blood pressure, and fever that develop within 6 hours after transfusion and usually resolve with supportive care within 48 to 96 hours.