25-year-old female with a history of fibromyomatous and severe menometrorrhagia
A 25-year-old female with a history of fibromyomatous and severe menometrorrhagia is scheduled for a blood transfusion. She has become quite fatigued and has developed shortness of breath with minimal exertion.
Her hemoglobin is 6.1 mg/dL. While receiving her second unit of RBCs the patient developed a very pruritic rash over the shoulder.
Figure.
The patient’s vital signs are stable. She is not febrile. Her blood pressure is 120/70 mmHg. What will be the best action to take?
- Continue blood transfusion rate, report to the blood bank
- Continue the blood transfusion, infuse normal saline, obtain a direct anti-globulin test, and repeat type and cross match
- Immediately discontinue the blood transfusion and administer corticosteroids
- Continue blood transfusion, administer antihistamines
- Immediately discontinue the blood transfusion and administer epinephrine
The correct answer is:
Continue blood transfusion, administer antihistamines
Educational Objective:
Recognize urticaria as a common and self-limited reaction to transfusion.
Key Point:
Urticarial or allergic transfusion reactions are self-limited. They do not require discontinuation of the transfusion and usually subside with the use of antihistamines.
Explanation:
The patient has developed an urticarial or allergic reaction to transfusion. These are relatively common mild reactions that may occur in up to 3% of transfusions. They do not require discontinuation of the blood transfusion and usually respond well to administration of diphenhydramine. They need to be monitored closely. If the patient condition deteriorates with dyspnea, angioedema, or low blood pressure, the patient should be treated for anaphylaxis with immediate discontinuation of the transfusion, protection of the airway, and administration of epinephrine.
There is no need for the use of corticosteroids in the treatment of immunologic blood transfusion reactions. Hydrate with normal saline, obtain addition of direct antiglobulin testing, and repeat the type and crossmatch as indicated in cases of acute hemolytic reaction.
References:
Goodnough, Lawrence T. Risks of Blood Transfusion. Crit Care Med 2003: 31(12 Suppl): S678-86
Connell NT. Transfusion Medicine. Prim Care. 2016 Dec;43(4):651-659. Jun;30(3):619-34.
This question appears in Med-Challenger Internal Medicine Exam Review with CME
Try for free and save. Ace your exams and meet your CME/MOC requirements for just $35 a month!