Hilary Jones...Drummer

 

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Dosage

adult man

adult woman

weight 

kg

current Hct

%

estimated blood volume mL
allowable blood loss  mL

Formulas

Allowable Blood Loss (ABL)*

EBV x (Hi - Hf)
Hi

 = ABL

Hi = initial Hct
Hf = final lowest acceptable Hct

 

Estimated Blood Volume (EBV)

EBV = weight (kg) x average blood volume

 

65 mL/kg

Average blood volumes**

Age

Blood volume

Premature Neonates 95 mL/kg
Full Term Neonates 85 mL/kg
Infants 80 mL/kg
Adult Men 75 mL/kg
Adult Women 

 

Normal Hct Values***

Men 42-52%
Women 37-47%

 

If the patient is obese, using the IBW or ABW will give more accuracy than an actual weight.


 

Example

Question:  Before surgery is to take place, what is the estimated blood volume (EBV) of a female patient weighing 50 kg?  Also, what is the allowable blood loss (ABL) of this patient if her Hct is 45?

Just an example.  Does not work.

In the example above, EBV = 50kg x 65 (adult woman's blood volume) = 3250
The initial Hct (Hi) = 45%, her current Hct
The final lowest acceptable Hct (Hf) = 30% (What ever cut off is used clinically to decide how low the individual's Hct will be allowed to drop.  Thirty percent is used in this calculator but in reality this will vary from case to case.)
So the example would look like this:

3250 x (45 - 30)
45

 = 1083

Using this rough estimate, the patient in this example could loose 1083 mL of blood without needing a transfusion.

 

Replacing Blood Loss

    "Ideally, blood loss should be replaced with crystalloid or colloid solutions to maintain intravascular volume (normovolemia) until the danger of anemia outweighs the risks of transfusion.  At that point, further blood loss is replaced with transfusions of red blood cells to maintain hemoglobin concentration (or hematocrit) at that level.  For most patients, that point corresponds to a hemoglobin between 7 and 10 g/dL (or a hematocrit of 21-30%).  Below a hemoglobin concentration of 7 g/dL, the resting cardiac output has to increase greatly to maintain normal oxygen delivery" (Morgan & Mikhail, 1996).

 

Estimating blood loss***

Dry sponges

 

4x4 hold ~ 10 mL blood
Ray-techs ~ 10-20 mL blood
Lap sponges ~ 100 mL blood

Pediatric cases should have sponges & gauze weighed for blood loss**

 

Blood loss replacement***

Replace 1 mL blood with:

 

3 mL crystalloid (i.e. NS, Dextrose, LR)
1 mL colloid (i.e. albumin**, Hespan®, Dextran®)
1 mL whole blood
1 mL PRBC

 

*Miller (2000).
**Morgan & Mikhail (1996).
***Naglehout, Zaglaniczy & Haglund (2001).


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