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Autologous Blood Donation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1988
To the Editor. —The recent article on autologous blood donation 1 was welcome and informative. Further aspects of optimal blood conservation deserve mention. Normovolemic hemodilution is an extremely useful anesthetic technique, 2 which can be used in conjunction with autologous donations to further avoid homologous transfusion.
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Autologous cord blood transfusion

Acta Paediatrica, 1994
Newborn piglets were exsanguinated (60% of blood volume) and retransfused 1 h later. One test group received adult pig red blood cells, the other piglet cord blood cells; controls were infused with plasma. While all controls died, satisfactory results were achieved in piglets transfused with either adult or foetal blood.
A, Ballin   +5 more
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Preoperative Autologous Blood Donation

AACN Clinical Issues: Advanced Practice in Acute and Critical Care, 1996
Preoperative autologous blood donation (PABD) is the donation of the patient's own blood before surgery for use in planned surgical procedures. Appropriate patients for this form of blood conservation are those having elective surgery for which blood is usually transfused, whose hemoglobin is no less than 11 g/dL, and who display no signs or symptoms ...
P T, Toy, K, Kerr
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Autologous blood transfusions

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2001
Due to enormous risks of transfusion-transmitted diseases in allogenic blood transfusions, including dreaded AIDS, there has been constant endeavour to look for a safer alternative. Autologous transfusion which is transfusion of blood/component donated by intended recipient, has proved to be a safe and viable alternative. Initially tried in 1874 in the
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Autologous Blood Salvage Procedures

1991
Autologous transfusion is not a luxury. Some states have passed legislation mandating that surgical patients be informed of the alternatives to homologous blood administration as well as the risks and benefits of transfusion. Technological advances have made autologous blood salvage in surgery, the postoperative period, and certain trauma situations a ...
L, Stehling, H L, Zauder
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Predeposit autologous blood donation

Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 1988
Predeposit autologous donation for elective surgical procedures during which there is a potential requirement for transfusion is medically proven as safe and efficacious but significantly underutilized. The primary advantages are avoidance of transfusion‐transmitted disease and alloimmunization. Appropriate donor selection is essential.
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[Autologous blood transfusion].

La Revue du praticien, 2001
Autologous blood transfusion techniques are the principal means of reducing allogeneic blood exposure. Those techniques were developed in order to prevent the risk of contamination by viruses, mainly HVB, HCV and HIV. However that risk has become so small that all studies show an exorbitant cost/efficiency ratio.
N, Rosencher, C, Conseiller
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Autologous Blood Predonation

1991
In cardiac surgery, ten and more years ago, it was current practice to use homologous blood as a routine priming component of the extracorporeal system. In addition, after weaning from extracorporeal circulation, hemoglobin values were transfused in patients up to values between 10–12 g Hb/ 100 ml, since the oxygen transport capacity reaches its ...
H. Kuppe, Th. Breitfeld, P. Schmucker
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Autologous blood transfusion

Medical Journal of Australia, 1986
Ram S. Seshadri, David Roxby, R.W. Beal
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