Blood Transfusions Kill Patients, Say Doctors

by JW Ben 34 Replies latest watchtower medical

  • JW Ben
    JW Ben

    Blood Transfusions Kill Patients, Say Doctors

    (Picture: Your Health Daily logo) February 11 1999 LONDON (NYT Syndicate) -- Blood transfusions given routinely to tens of thousands of critically ill patients may be killing them, doctors have found. Canadian researchers have found that giving extra blood, despite its essential role in maintaining life, can cause more harm than good in those who have been thought in greatest need of it. The unexpected finding, from a study of more than 800 critically ill patients,will deliver a serious blow to the idea of accident victims being stretchered into a hospital with a bag of life-giving blood suspended above them. Doctors had assumed that any means of boosting oxygen supply to the body's tissues in those who were seriously ill would improve their chances of survival. But the Canadian research shows that critically ill patients who received more blood were up to twice as likely to die as those who received less. In Britain, an estimated 800,000 patients receive blood transfusions each year, most after routine surgery, and demand for blood is rising. Using less blood would also save costs and conserve a scarce resource. The aim of a transfusion is to restore levels of hemoglobin, the oxygen- carrying constituent of red blood cells. Normal levels of hemoglobin range from 14 to 17 grams per deciliter. In the Canadian study, half of the 838 seriously unwell patients were given enough blood to raise their hemoglobin over 10 grams per deciliter, while the other half were restricted to only 7-9 grams per deciliter, half the normal level. One third of the restricted group received no blood at all. On average the restricted group received three units of blood (one and a half liters) less than the unrestricted group _ but more of them survived. Among patients under 55 and the less severely ill, those who received less blood (or no blood at all) were half as likely to die as those who received more. The only exceptions were patients with heart attacks and unstable angina (chest pain). Dr. Paul Hebert and his colleagues from the University of Ottawa say in the New England Journal of Medicine: "Our findings indicate that the use of a threshold...as low as 7 grams of hemoglobin per deciliter...was at least as effective as and possibly superior to a liberal transfusion strategy...in critically ill patients." It is well-known that giving too much blood or other infusions can cause heart attacks or water on the lungs because of the effort required to pump the extra liquid around the body. But the researchers found these factors could not explain the differences they found. In a commentary on the findings, Wesley Ely and Gordon Bernard of the Vanderbilt School of Medicine in Nashville, Tenn., say it is difficult to explain the harm caused by liberal transfusion. One possibility is that a transfusion, like a transplant, delivers a shock to the immune system. "Harmless" viruses in the blood may also be implicated. They say more trials are needed to determine the best treatment for critically ill patients. "With such knowledge, more physicians will be able to adhere to the dictum 'first do no harm,' and we will have a surplus of blood for transfusion rather than a shortage." Copyright 1999 The New York Times Syndicate. All rights reserved
  • GetBusyLiving
    GetBusyLiving

    'lol', say GetBusyLiving

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Can I play too???

    Aspirin Causes Headaches and Heart Failure, Say Doctors.

  • Joyzabel
    Joyzabel

    ok troll JW Ben.......what doctors? in what medical journal? sensationalized rag magazines that sprew headlines do not make for scientific data.

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    Many people are killed each yr by medications and procedures gone wrong - doctors kill people.

    S

  • Jez
    Jez

    Having no blood kills people.

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    "Avoid the loss of organs of the body by surgical operations"
    "medicines are of little value" - The Golden Age, Nov. 13, 1929, pp. 106, 107

    "The earlier in the forenoon you take the sun bath, the greater will be the beneficial effect, because you get more of the ultra-violet rays, which are healing." - The Golden Age, Sept. 13, 1933, p. 777

    "Aspirin causes heart disease" - The Golden Age, Feb. 27, 1935, pp. 343, 344

    See! I told you so! The Awake! Magazine says so!

  • MerryMagdalene
    MerryMagdalene

    Sounds familiar... Are you a student of the writers at Bethel, JWBen?... "Doctors say..." "Experts say..." "Scientists say..."

    Which doctors? Where? When? In what context?

    ~Merry Says

  • JW Ben
    JW Ben

    Picture: Your Health Daily logo February 11 1999

    LONDON (NYT Syndicate) -- Blood transfusions given routinely to tens of thousands of critically ill patients may be killing them, doctors havefound.

    Canadian researchers have found that giving extra blood, despite itsessential role in maintaining life, can cause more harm than good in those who have been thought in greatest need of it.

    The unexpected finding, from a study of more than 800 critically ill patients, will deliver a serious blow to the idea of accident victims being stretchered into a hospital with a bag of life-giving blood suspended above them.

    Doctors had assumed that any means of boosting oxygen supply to the body's tissues in those who were seriously ill would improve their chances of survival.

    But the Canadian research shows that critically ill patients who received more blood were up to twice as likely to die as those who received less.

    In Britain, an estimated 800,000 patients receive blood transfusions each year, most after routine surgery, and demand for blood is rising. Using less blood would also save costs and conserve a scarce resource.

    The aim of a transfusion is to restore levels of hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying constituent of red blood cells. Normal levels of hemoglobin range from 14 to 17 grams per deciliter.

    In the Canadian study, half of the 838 seriously unwell patients were given enough blood to raise their hemoglobin over 10 grams per deciliter, while the other half were restricted to only 7-9 grams per deciliter, half the normal level.

    One third of the restricted group received no blood at all. On average the restricted group received three units of blood (one and a half liters) less than the unrestricted group _ but more of them survived.

    Among patients under 55 and the less severely ill, those who received less blood (or no blood at all) were half as likely to die as those who received more.

    The only exceptions were patients with heart attacks and unstable angina (chest pain).

    Dr. Paul Hebert and his colleagues from the University of Ottawa say in the New England Journal of Medicine: "Our findings indicate that the use of a threshold...as low as 7 grams of hemoglobin per deciliter...was at least as effective as and possibly superior to a liberal transfusion strategy...in
    critically ill patients."

    It is well-known that giving too much blood or other infusions can cause heart attacks or water on the lungs because of the effort required to pump the extra liquid around the body. But the researchers found these factors could not explain the differences they found.

    In a commentary on the findings, Wesley Ely and Gordon Bernard of the Vanderbilt School of Medicine in Nashville, Tenn., say it is difficult to explain the harm caused by liberal transfusion.

    One possibility is that a transfusion, like a transplant, delivers a shock to the immune system. "Harmless" viruses in the blood may also be implicated.

    They say more trials are needed to determine the best treatment for critically ill patients.

    "With such knowledge, more physicians will be able to adhere to the dictum 'first do no harm,' and we will have a surplus of blood for transfusion rather than a shortage."

    Copyright 1999 The New York Times Syndicate. All rights reserved

  • IP_SEC
    IP_SEC
    Dr. Paul Hebert

    Hummm isnt this the chuckling doctor from the Simpsons?

    OOOPS sorry

    That Dr Julius Hibbert. My bad.

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