The baby born from that pregnancy was immediately sent to a children's hospital for transfusions and treatment of a collapsed lung. |
|
Based on these findings, the use of autologous transfusions in orthopedic procedures is expected to increase. |
|
While I've been casting around for reasons to undergo blood transfusions, my father took the time to become genuinely ill. |
|
The test is affected by red blood cell transfusions and should not be performed within 6 weeks following a transfusion. |
|
Before death, the organ donor received several transfusions of blood products. |
|
Transfusions or exchange transfusions are also recommended for patients with severe hypoxia. |
|
We just expected the blood to be there for the transfusions he required during the operation. |
|
In the first part of the study, patients with diverticular hemorrhage were treated medically, including transfusions as required. |
|
Some people who received blood transfusions and blood products before this were infected with hepatitis C from donor blood. |
|
Curiously, family physicians were more likely than cardiologists to order transfusions. |
|
It is a frustrating and upsetting time with regular visits to the hospital for blood tests and transfusions. |
|
Barbara remains in the hospital and needs blood donors for more transfusions. |
|
He was treated with blood and platelet transfusions and discharged eight days later with a modest improvement in peripheral blood count. |
|
He needs regular blood transfusions and must endure a nightly cocktail of medication to keep going. |
|
Nearly 90 percent of MDS patients are anemic and require regular transfusions of red cells. |
|
Pregnant mothers too require blood transfusions from time to time as do some premature babies. |
|
It seems that some patients needing blood transfusions may benefit from receiving chicken blood rather than human blood. |
|
The patient subsequently received platelet and red blood cell transfusions. |
|
Also in countries where blood is not tested for hepatitis B, blood transfusions may still be a cause of infection. |
|
The availability of blood for operations and transfusions is an essential part of our health care system. |
|
|
She was treated with intravenous folinic acid and antibiotics and was given transfusions of blood products. |
|
Women with morbidly adherent placenta were likely to experience more complications and transfusions. |
|
Patients who received only autologous blood had significantly fewer infections than patients who received allogeneic blood transfusions. |
|
Blood transfusions are most commonly received using a small plastic tube called a cannula, which is inserted into a vein in your arm. |
|
Treatment for this serious anemia may include blood transfusions to boost levels of red blood cells. |
|
For instance, if your fatigue is the result of anemia, blood transfusions may help. |
|
Beta-thalassaemia, also known as Cooley's anaemia, is also a severe disease with dependence on regular blood transfusions from early life. |
|
But the miracle tot held on to life, bouncing back from potentially fatal colds, an infection, two blood transfusions and jaundice. |
|
The efficacy of prophylactic antipyretics for all transfusions, although widely practiced, has yet to be established. |
|
The medical community generally knows that Jehovah's Witnesses refuse blood transfusions. |
|
It also highlighted excessive use of injections and blood transfusions without proper sterilisation. |
|
As discussed, transmission can occur through tainted blood transfusions as well as through intravenous drug use. |
|
Blood samples from dogs after autogenous blood transfusions served as controls. |
|
With blood shortages for transfusions, companies are researching artificial blood, including human hemoglobin cultured in plant sap. |
|
An anemia which developed despite continued blood transfusions in two dogs splenectomized during plethora has also been studied. |
|
As a young child, Spear helped the local veterinarian with the livestock, including giving blood transfusions and administering medications. |
|
The virus can also be transmitted from human to human through blood transfusions or organ transplant. |
|
Lower also performed the first blood transfusions, from animal to animal and from human to human. |
|
Dr. Frame reported transfusions outside the Class Period, but there was no medical documentation evidencing a transfusion at any time. |
|
The transfusions are not a cure, but are a second line of defense for the body. |
|
|
In the 1990s as the minister of health, he exposed ministry-level incompetence that had allowed HIV-tainted blood to be used for transfusions. |
|
To minimize the possibility of transmitting the virus via blood transfusions, voluntary blood donation programs were implemented. |
|
We have blood transfusions and transfusions of many kinds and other testing. |
|
At that point the patient and the health care team need to decide whether they will decrease or stop the transfusions. |
|
These include transfusions, pain control, physiotherapy, and simple convalescence. |
|
More frequent transfusions usually are not helpful and the patient is likely to live only a few more days, or a very few weeks at most. |
|
For older children, a history of a major surgery or of having received blood transfusions or blood products before May 1992 requires evaluation. |
|
The reduction in hospital stay was present in all subgroups and most pronounced in the patients undergoing elective surgery for aneurysm who received transfusions. |
|
The issue of informed consent was raised and it was noted that in Canada separate formal written consent is not required for transfusions. |
|
An adopted Quebecer since 1999, born in Gabon, Africa, Ms. Merryl Nteme is an old hand at blood transfusions, as she suffers from drepanocytosis. |
|
She was treated conservatively with acid suppression and transfusions. |
|
We were already using this room for basal metabolism determinations, electrocardiograms, intravenous administrations of glucose, saline, plasma, and occasionally transfusions. |
|
This, combined with high temperatures caused by my adverse reaction to blood transfusions, had turned by mid February into high-grade or double pneumonia. |
|
Add some basic antibiotics, blood transfusions and a safe operating room, and the risk of death can almost be eliminated. |
|
Blood transfusions on the battlefield, pioneered by Canadian doctor Norman Bethune in the Spanish Civil War, saved many lives. |
|
Now we can set up a scientifically well prepared study to evaluate the transfusions vs. improved care. |
|
Previous transfusions may sensitize patients to foreign platelet antigens. |
|
She was treated with plasmapheresis and platelet transfusions. |
|
Your child may need blood and platelet transfusions frequently. |
|
Whenever possible, transfusions of all blood products should be limited. |
|
|
For example, some people have been infected through blood transfusions or through piercing or tattooing with unsterilized needles. |
|
Because of their religious conviction, the Jehovah Witnesses absolutely refuse to receive blood transfusions. |
|
Although in utero transfusions remain the treatment of choice for anaemic fetuses affected by red cell alloimmunisation, methods for monitoring the at-risk fetus have evolved. |
|
Taking an even larger leap in the dark, Ahern attributes the concept to blood transfusions. |
|
His absence, he said, had been caused by a life-threatening blood disorder that required an intensive course of transfusions. |
|
Hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, exchange transfusions, and forced diuresis are ineffective in phenothiazine poisoning. |
|
In the process she has faced round after round of blood transfusions and radical hospital treatment to negate the effects of the illness that is destroying her bone marrow. |
|
He needed 15 blood transfusions to fight anaemia and a rare infection. |
|
In late stages of the illness, a patient may become exhausted by the effort to have the necessary blood tests and transfusions. |
|
Despite the non-existence of antibiotics, blood transfusions and life-support machines, most of these soldiers recovered, often from life-threatening injuries. |
|
Consider the crystalloid sparing effect of red cell transfusions in potential lung donors with alveolar-capillary leak. |
|
In summary, erythropoietin administration may reduce RBC transfusions in high risk infants. |
|
The patient received corticosteroid therapy and blood transfusions, with improvement of her hematologic parameters, but died 54 days after admission for respiratory failure. |
|
And if a doctor simply feels that blood transfusions are good for people with pneumonia, should that be enough reason to transfuse them? |
|
Thalassemia is a form of anemia which in its severe form requires a patient to undergo repeated blood transfusions. |
|
Is this product also recommended for myelodysplastic syndrome when these patients depend on multiple transfusions over a long time? |
|
Scores of children suffering from Thalassemia visit the hospital frequently to get blood transfusions. |
|
Blood transfusions, coupled with safe medical procedures, save lives every day. |
|
We are in the middle of the summer season which unfortunately translates into a high number of accidents with a greater potential of injuries requiring blood transfusions. |
|
More is known about the frequency and aetiology of the hazards of blood transfusions. |
|
|
During my three-month hospitalization and for approximately another ten years, I received transfusions of multiple blood products for ongoing skin grafting and correctional procedures. |
|
In their reports to the Committee, States refer to many other traditional practices considered harmful to children, including abduction, scarification, the refusal of immunization and blood transfusions and others. |
|
He was discharged on 10 May 1993 after receiving two transfusions of concentrated red blood corpuscles, and was transferred to the prison infirmary. |
|
Thus, not only does the file remain silent on the supposedly blood transfusions, but in addition, the hospital authorities formally deny on more than one occasion that any such transfusions took place. |
|
Transfusional iron overload may be seen after as few as 10 red blood cell transfusions, making iron overload a common secondary disease among transfusion dependent patients. |
|
He stated that he had received one Blood Transfusion in Canada during the Class Period and candidly acknowledged receiving Blood transfusions 4 times prior to the Class Period. |
|
Certainly the Claimant strenuously claimed at the hearing that the only conceivable source of the HCV infection in her case were the transfusions in question, since there was no other possible result given her lifestyle. |
|
Treatment of acute overdosage consists of hospitalization of the severely myelosuppressed patient, platelet and granulocyte transfusions, antibiotics, and symptomatic treatment of mucositis. |
|
Severe hematologic toxicity may require supportive therapy with platelet transfusions for bleeding, and granulocyte transfusions and antibiotics if sepsis is documented. |
|
The highest priorities for further study in the Panel's opinion include: ECMO, haematolysis, intrauterine transfusions, TPN, oxygen therapy, IV therapy, particularly using blood products, IVIg, etc. and enteral feeding. |
|
Children who have undergone HSCT are at high risk of fluid overload due to voluntary intravenous hyperhydration, infusion of multiple antibiotics, veno-occlusive disease, and multiple transfusions of blood products. |
|
After an infectious disease my marrow has begun to work less and less until arriving at medullary aplasia: I needed many transfusions of platelets for this. |
|
He has battled through 35 days of intubated ventilation, a further 30 days on CPAP ventilation, Meningitis, four blood transfusions, a hydrocele and hernia operation. |
|
Hemochromatosis can also be acquired by patients affected by other chronic diseases who routinely receive repeated blood transfusions, as this can lead to an overload of iron. |
|
To satisfy the requirements of the Plan, a thalassemia victim need only show that he or she received blood transfusions during the period and that he or she is Hepatitis C positive. |
|
Care professionals realized that they might well save the patient's life through transfusions but, doing this, might make them pariahs, outcasts, in their own social group which would reject them because they received blood. |
|
My wife has Hepatitis C. The only logical places she contracted this is either from blood transfusions in Vancouver General Hospital or St. Lukes Hospital Bellingham, Wash. |
|
He was really poorly in the four days we had him: he had seven transfusions, he had bleeding on the brain, his potassium levels were through the roof. |
|
The Democratic Unionist minister maintains a ban on gay men giving blood even though all blood donations are screened for potential infections and diseases before being used for transfusions. |
|
In future, companies might challenge Obamacare's mandate to cover immunisations, blood transfusions or medicines derived from pigs, though none has yet done so. |
|
|
Get vaccinations against influenza and against hepatitis A and hepatitis B viruses that can still, very rarely, be transmitted by blood transfusions. |
|
In certain cases, despite these treatments, transfusions are still needed. |
|
Treatment should aim to support the patient during this period and should utilize such measures as blood transfusions and reverse-barrier nursing. |
|
Members of certain religions are told to refuse blood transfusions. |
|
Additional transfusions may be required in the future. |
|
In addition, red cell transfusions cause increases in severe side effects such as healthcare-acquired infections, thrombosis, and mortality. |
|
In the winter of 1667, Denys performed several transfusions on Antoine Mauroy with calf's blood. |
|
During the years 1825 and 1830, Blundell performed 10 transfusions, five of which were beneficial, and published his results. |
|
However, early transfusions were risky and many resulted in the death of the patient. |
|
Landsteiner's work made it possible to determine blood group and allowed a way for blood transfusions to be carried out much more safely. |
|
Halsted also performed one of the first blood transfusions in the United States. |
|
Objections to blood transfusions may arise for personal, medical, or religious reasons. |
|
For example, Jehovah's Witnesses object to blood transfusions due to their belief that blood is sacred. |
|
As patients undergo subsequent transfusions, alloantibodies to multiple antigens may develop. |
|
Kawasaki disease is often treated with transfusions of blood rich in antibodies, but it is not known if Jett underwent such therapy. |
|
Chagas disease is not contagious, but it can be passed on through pregnancy, organ transplants or blood transfusions. |
|
Geoffrey Keynes, a British surgeon, developed a portable machine that could store blood to enable transfusions to be carried out more easily. |
|
The boy avoided dialysis and blood transfusions and today seems to be doing fine, with no sign of permanent damage, Outman said. |
|
Thalassaemia is a genetic disorder which requires regular blood transfusions and extensive medical care. |
|
Occasionally, exchange transfusions have been used when there is a high parasitemia and hemolysis. |
|
|
In the early 1950's, he was the first physician in Worcester County to do exchange transfusions for newborn babies born with erythroblastosis. |
|
Veterinarians also administer transfusions to other animals. |
|
Subsequent transfusions were successful with patients of Professor James Young Simpson after whom the Simpson Memorial Hospital in Edinburgh was named. |
|
An 8-year-old girl with homozygous sickle cell disease had been receiving monthly transfusions and chelation therapy since having a stroke 3 years earlier. |
|
Guidelines recommend blood transfusions should be reserved for patients with or at risk of cardiovascular instability due to the degree of their anaemia. |
|
Blood transfusions fell into obscurity for the next 150 years. |
|
In the United States, blood transfusions were performed nearly 3 million times during hospitalizations in 2011, making it the most common procedure performed. |
|
Anna Children's Hospital and the University of Vienna, Austria, will present data on the safety and efficacy of INTERCEPT platelet transfusions in immunocompromised children. |
|
The risk of severe bacterial infection is estimated, as of 2002, at about 1 in 50,000 platelet transfusions, and 1 in 500,000 red blood cell transfusions. |
|
Septic reaction from transfusions of bacterially contaminated platelets represents the greatest current patient risk of contamination in transfusion medicine. |
|
A decrease in red and white blood cell count and thrombocytes after the procedure was observed, and 3 patients needed blood transfusions or platelet infusion. |
|
Russell refused blood transfusions from emergency workers at least 10 times, even attempting to pull out an intravenous line, according to her relatives. |
|