Blood Transfusion Procedure Nursing | Reaction Types, Complications (Hemolytic/Febrile) NCLEX
RegisteredNurseRN・2 minutes read
Blood transfusions replace low red blood cells in patients due to various reasons like surgery, trauma, anemia, or cancer, ensuring the crucial function of carrying oxygen and removing carbon dioxide in the body. Nurses must follow strict protocols to prevent reactions, monitoring patients carefully during transfusions, and recognizing signs like rash, elevated temperature, aches, chills, tachycardia, increased respirations, oliguria, and nausea to act promptly in case of hemolytic, allergic, or febrile reactions.
Insights
- Blood transfusion is essential for patients experiencing blood loss, anemia, or other conditions affecting red blood cell levels, with guidelines recommending transfusion when hemoglobin falls to critical levels.
- Nurses must diligently adhere to transfusion protocols, ensuring patient identification, blood compatibility, and monitoring for potential reactions like hemolytic, allergic, or febrile responses, which can have severe consequences if not promptly recognized and managed.
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Recent questions
What is the purpose of a blood transfusion?
To replace low red blood cells in patients.
What are the symptoms of low red blood cells?
Paleness, fatigue, shortness of breath, increased heart rate.
What are the risks of transfusion reactions?
Hemolytic reactions, allergic reactions, febrile reactions, GVHD.
How should nurses prevent transfusion reactions?
Follow hospital protocols, verify patient identification, monitor vital signs.
What should be done in case of a transfusion reaction?
Stop transfusion, replace tubing with saline, monitor vital signs, notify doctor.
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