Zentralblatt für Chirurgie
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Review Comparative Study
[Anemia and erythropoietin in critically ill patients].
The transfusion of red blood cells is still associated with possible adverse effects and a residual risk of transmission of viral and nonviral diseases. In addition, there is an increasing shortage of blood supply worldwide. ⋯ The implications of anemia for the progression and prognosis of critical illness are still unclear and the optimal treatment, including optimal "transfusion triggers" remains controversial. Recombinant human EPO has been proven to be effective in ameliorating the anemia of critical illness in several pilot studies and is currently being tested in larger trials.
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Review Comparative Study
[Haemostaseological aspects of perioperative blood management].
Recent studies in humans have shown that tissue factor on the surface of endothelial cells, monocytes, or subendothelial structures sparks plasmatic coagulation. In vivo, there is no functional separation of an "endogenous" and "exogenous" pathway of the coagulation cascade. However, global laboratory tests run along such pathways due to preincubation with specific activators and, hence, allow localization of inherited coagulation defects. ⋯ The quality of such plasma undergoing consecutive filtration steps has to be clinically studied. The application of a synthetic platelet substitute, the "plateletsome", containing platelet glycoproteins led to significantly improved haemostasis without generating systemic procoagulant activity. In a far future, procoagulant cell surface transformation may be influenced by topic application of inhaled thrombomodulin loaded liposomes or by sense or antisense oligonucleotides inducing thrombomodulin expression or suppressing tissue factor expression, respectively.