Fresh blood and aged stored blood are equally efficacious in immediately reversing anemia-induced brain oxygenation deficits in humans
- PMID: 16645441
- DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200605000-00005
Fresh blood and aged stored blood are equally efficacious in immediately reversing anemia-induced brain oxygenation deficits in humans
Abstract
Background: Erythrocytes are transfused to treat or prevent imminent inadequate tissue oxygenation. 2,3-diphosphoglycerate concentration decreases and oxygen affinity of hemoglobin increases (P50 decreases) with blood storage, leading some to propose that erythrocytes stored for 14 or more days do not release sufficient oxygen to make their transfusion efficacious. The authors tested the hypothesis that erythrocytes stored for 3 weeks are as effective in supplying oxygen to human tissues as are erythrocytes stored for less than 5 h.
Methods: Nine healthy volunteers donated 2 units of blood more than 3 weeks before they were tested with a standard, computerized neuropsychological test (digit-symbol substitution test [DSST]) on 2 days, 1 week apart, before and after acute isovolemic reduction of their hemoglobin concentration to 7.4 and 5.5 g/dl. Volunteers randomly received autologous erythrocytes stored for either less than 5 h ("fresh") or 3 weeks ("stored") to return their hemoglobin concentration to 7.5 g/dl (double blinded). Erythrocytes of the alternate storage duration were transfused on the second experimental day. The DSST was repeated after transfusion.
Results: Acute anemia slowed DSST performance equivalently in both groups. Transfusion of stored erythrocytes with decreased P50 reversed the altered DSST (P < 0.001) to a time that did not differ from that at 7.4 g/dl hemoglobin during production of acute anemia (P = 0.88). The erythrocyte transfusion-induced DSST improvement did not differ between groups (P = 0.96).
Conclusion: Erythrocytes stored for 3 weeks are as efficacious as are erythrocytes stored for 3.5 h in reversing the neurocognitive deficit of acute anemia. Requiring fresh rather than stored erythrocytes for augmentation of oxygen delivery does not seem warranted.
Comment in
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Physiologic transfusion triggers: do we have to use (our) brain?Anesthesiology. 2006 May;104(5):905-6. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200605000-00002. Anesthesiology. 2006. PMID: 16645438 No abstract available.
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Anemia-induced neurocognitive dysfunction: is oxygen the only player?Anesthesiology. 2007 Feb;106(2):400-1; author reply 401-2. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200702000-00034. Anesthesiology. 2007. PMID: 17264739 No abstract available.
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