A clinical survey of bleeding, thrombosis, and blood product use in decompensated cirrhosis patients



Título del documento: A clinical survey of bleeding, thrombosis, and blood product use in decompensated cirrhosis patients
Revista: Annals of hepatology
Base de datos: PERIÓDICA
Número de sistema: 000419059
ISSN: 1665-2681
Autores: 1
1
1
Instituciones: 1University of Virginia, University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, Virginia. Estados Unidos de América
Año:
Periodo: Sep-Oct
Volumen: 11
Número: 5
Paginación: 686-690
País: México
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de documento: Artículo
Enfoque: Analítico, descriptivo
Resumen en inglés The relative incidence of bleeding and thrombotic events and the use of blood products in hospitalized cirrhosis patients have not been widely reported. We aimed to estimate the magnitude of bleeding events and venous thrombosis in consecutive hospitalized cirrhotic patients over a finite time period and to examine the amount and indications for blood product use in cirrhosis patients admitted to a tertiary care center. Results. Among patients admitted with decompensated liver disease, 34 (40%) suffered bleeding events (about one-half non-variceal) and 6 patients (7%) suffered deep venous thrombosis. In the blood product survey, 168 patients were transfused with plasma or platelets during the survey intervals. Liver disease patients accounted for 7.7% of the total but disproportionately consumed 32.4% (46 of 142) of the units of plasma mostly administered as prophylaxis. In contrast, cirrhosis patients received only 7 of the 53 units of platelets transfused (13.2%) during the survey intervals. Conclusions. Coagulation issues constitute a common problem in patients with liver disease. Recent advances in laboratory testing have shown that stable cirrhosis patients are relatively hypercoagulable. The result of this prospective survey among decompensated (unstable) cirrhosis patients shows that, while DVT is not uncommon, bleeding (non-variceal in one half) remains the dominant clinical problem. This situation likely sustains the common practice of plasma infusion in these patients although its use is of unproven and questionable benefit. Better clinical tools are needed to refine clinical practice in this setting
Disciplinas: Medicina
Palabras clave: Gastroenterología,
Hematología,
Cirrosis hepática,
Transfusión sanguínea,
Bancos de sangre,
Plasma,
Plaquetas
Keyword: Gastroenterology,
Hematology,
Liver cirrhosis,
Blood transfusion,
Blood banks,
Plasma,
Platelets
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