A retrospective study of the effects of small-dose aprotinin on blood loss and transfusion needs during total hip arthroplasty
Aprotinin is a proteinase inhibitor that reduces blood loss in total hip arthroplasty when administered in large doses. Little is known about the capability of smaller doses of aprotinin in reducing blood loss and transfusion needs in this surgical setting. We reviewed the medical records of 372 pat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of anaesthesiology 1998-11, Vol.15 (6), p.669-675 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Aprotinin is a proteinase inhibitor that reduces blood loss in total hip arthroplasty when administered in large doses. Little is known about the capability of smaller doses of aprotinin in reducing blood loss and transfusion needs in this surgical setting. We reviewed the medical records of 372 patients who had undergone unilateral primary total hip arthroplasty under general anaesthesia during a 6-year period (1989 to 1994) at our institution. Successively, 193 patients had and 179 patients had not received aprotinin in a dose of 20 000 kallikrein inhibitor units per kilogram body weight intravenously before surgery. Neither the volume of red blood cells lost nor that of red blood cells transfused during hospitalization differed significantly between the patients who had and those who had not received aprotinin (520 ± 406 vs. 549 ± 394 mL and 463 ± 379 vs. 475 ± 367 mL; P = 0.49 and P = 0.76 respectively). These results suggest that small-dose aprotinin was not effective in reducing blood loss and transfusion needs in patients undergoing unilateral primary total hip replacement. |
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ISSN: | 0265-0215 1365-2346 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00003643-199811000-00008 |