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- Title
Intravenous and Intraosseous Blood Transfusion With Three Different Pediatric Pressure Transfusion Strategies in an Immature Swine (Sus scrofa) Model of Hemorrhagic Shock: A Pilot Study.
- Authors
Bianchi, William; George, Taylor; McEvoy, Christian; Piehl, Mark; Manzano, Ana; Boboc, Michael; Zarow, Gregory J; Natarajan, Ramesh; Gaspary, Micah J; Auten, Jonathan; Roszko, Paul J D
- Abstract
<bold>Introduction: </bold>Exsanguination remains the leading cause of preventable death in military conflicts, and pediatric casualties are common. Transfusion is crucial to preserve life, but vascular access is challenging in children, so intraosseous (IO) access is often required. However, the optimal transfusion method is unclear. There was therefore the need for feasibility testing of a model for contrasting the efficacy of blood infusion devices via intravenous (IV) and IO access in immature swine with bone densities similar to children.<bold>Materials and Methods: </bold>Eighteen immature swine (21 ± 1 kg) were bled 31% of estimated blood volume and then received autologous blood delivered by pressure bag, push-pull (PP), or LifeFlow Rapid Infuser via IO (15-gauge IO needle placed in the humeral head) or IV (auricular 20-gauge), with monitoring for 60 minutes.<bold>Results: </bold>Flow rates for LifeFlow (172 ± 28 mL/kg) were 4-fold higher than pressure bag (44 ± 13 mL/kg, P < 0.001) and 80% higher than PP (95 ± 28 mL/kg, P < 0.02). However, higher hemolysis was evident in the IV LifeFlow condition, with 6-fold more plasma-free hemoglobin than other conditions (P < 0.0001).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>IV LifeFlow conferred higher flows, but higher hemolysis in this pilot study demonstrates the feasibility of an immature swine model toward determining optimal methods for resuscitating children with hemorrhagic shock.
- Subjects
HEMORRHAGIC shock; WILD boar; BLOOD transfusion; SWINE; BLOOD volume; INTRAOSSEOUS infusions; AUTOTRANSFUSION of blood; BLOOD transfusion equipment; INTRAVENOUS therapy equipment; PILOT projects; BIOLOGICAL models; RESEARCH; INTRAVENOUS therapy; ANALYSIS of variance; ANIMAL experimentation; RESEARCH methodology; EVALUATION research; MEDICAL cooperation; COMPARATIVE studies
- Publication
Military Medicine, 2020, Vol 185, p121
- ISSN
0026-4075
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1093/milmed/usz200