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Transfusion medicine /

Transfusion Medicine offers a concise, clinically focused and practical approach to this important area of medicine. This well-known handbook presents the experience of a world leader in the field of blood banking and transfusion therapy. Transfusion Medicine offers complete guidance on the full ran...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: McCullough, Jeffrey, 1938-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Hoboken : John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
Edición:3rd ed.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Preface; 1: History; 1.1 Ancient times; 1.2 The period 1500-1700; 1.3 The 1800s; 1.4 First transfusions in the United States; 1.5 The discovery of blood groups; 1.6 Anticoagulation; 1.7 Modern blood banking and blood banks; 1.8 Cadaver blood; 1.9 The Rh blood group system and prevention of Rh immunization; 1.10 Coombs and antiglobulin serum; 1.11 Plasma and the blood program during World War II; 1.12 Plastic bags and blood components; 1.13 Cryoprecipitate and factor VIII; 1.14 Red cell preservation; 1.15 Leukocyte antigens and antibodies.
  • 1.16 Platelet collection, storage, and transfusion1.17 Apheresis; 1.18 Granulocyte transfusions; 1.19 Summary; 2: The Blood Supply; 2.1 Worldwide blood supply; 2.2 The blood collection system; 2.3 Amount of blood collected; 2.4 Blood inventory sharing systems; 2.5 Other activities of community blood centers; 2.6 The plasma collection system; 2.7 Nongovernmental blood bank organizations; 2.8 Regulation of the blood supply system; 3: Recruitment of Blood Donors; 3.1 Demographic characteristics of blood donors; 3.2 Motivation of whole blood donors.
  • 3.3 The donation experience and factors influencing continued donation3.4 Whole blood donor recruitment strategies; 3.5 Apheresis donor recruitment; 3.6 Bone marrow donors; 4: Blood Donor Medical Assessment and Blood Collection; 4.1 Medical assessment of whole blood donors; 4.2 Collection of whole blood; 4.3 Postdonation care and adverse reactions to blood donation; 4.4 Therapeutic bleeding; 4.5 Medical assessment of apheresis donors; 4.6 Adverse reactions in apheresis donors; 5: Preparation, Storage, and Characteristics of Blood Components and Plasma Derivatives.
  • 5.1 Preparation of blood components from whole blood5.2 Irradiation of blood components; 5.3 Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells; 5.4 Plasma derivatives; 5.5 Pathogen-inactivated blood components; 5.6 Universal red cells; 5.7 Blood substitutes; 6: Autologous Blood Donation and Transfusion; 6.1 Strategies to reduce or avoid allogeneic transfusion; 6.2 Trends in the collection and transfusion of autologous blood; 6.3 Preoperative autologous blood donation; 6.4 Acute normovolemic hemodilution; 6.5 Intraoperative blood salvage; 6.6 Postoperative blood salvage; 6.7 Directed-donor blood.
  • 6.8 Patient-specific donation6.9 Minimal donor exposure programs; 7: Production of Components by Apheresis; 7.1 Apheresis instruments; 7.2 Plateletpheresis for the production of single-donor platelet concentrates; 7.3 Collection of red cells by apheresis; 7.4 Leukapheresis for the production of granulocyte concentrates; 7.5 Lymphocytapheresis for the collection of mononuclear cells; 7.6 Cytapheresis for the collection of peripheral blood stem cells; 7.7 Donor selection and complications of cytapheresis in normal donors; 7.8 Plasmapheresis and source plasma.