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Blood transfusion

Medicine, 2000
Blood transfusion is a potentially dangerous treatment in which adverse reactions are rare but can be fatal. This article introduces recently published national guidelines for the care of recipients of a blood transfusion (BCSH 1999) and focuses in particular on the responsibilities of nurses and midwives.
C, Atterbury, J, Wilkinson
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Blood transfusion

Emergency Nurse, 2006
The UK blood transfusion and tissue transplantation services site meanwhile, at www.transfusionguidelines.org/index.asp , provides clinical information, professional guidelines and examples of best practice, as well as information on donor selection.
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Risks of Blood Transfusion

Anesthesiology Clinics of North America, 2003
This article discusses advances in blood safety during the last 20 years, particularly for prevention of transfusion-transmitted viral infections. Although the most serious known risks from blood transfusion are administrative errors, transfusion-related acute lung injury, and bacterial contamination in platelet products, infection from emerging ...
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Complications of Blood Transfusion

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1964
Excerpt Every blood transfusion subjects the patient to hazards, some of which can be minimized by exercising necessary precautions while others cannot be reduced by methods now available.
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The Transfusion-Transmitted Viruses in Blood Transfusion

2001
Over the past 15 years, issues concerning the safety of the blood supply have caused significant changes in both national blood policies and the methods used in blood collection and screening in the United States. More specifically, the discovery that Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) could be transmitted by blood transfusion heightened public ...
N L, Luban, R F, Jubran
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PRESERVATION AND TRANSFUSION OF BLOOD

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1956
• The transfusion of either whole blood or red blood cells is a frequent and valuable procedure but carries a definite risk of morbidity and mortality. The chief dangers include incompatibility reactions, fever or toxemia caused by bacterial contamination, infectious hepatitis, and overloading the circulation.
D M, DONOHUE, B W, GABRIO, C A, FINCH
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Blood Transfusion or Blood Substitution?

Vox Sanguinis, 1986
Abstract. Blood transfusion has become a universally accepted, life‐saving procedure in modern clinical medicine. In addition, specific blood fractions are widely used in the therapeutic treatment of haematological disorders. Problems are, however, encountered in conventional transfusion practice and in the clinical use of blood components.
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Blood transfusion

Medical Journal of Australia, 1980
B, O'Neill, J, Gunns, M, Vernon
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