Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Leukoreduction reduces inflammation after blood transfusion in dogs
By McMichael, M A et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2010·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effect of leukoreduction on transfusion-induced inflammation in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of healthy medium and large breed dogs experienced inflammation after receiving blood transfusions. The dogs that received regular packed red blood cells showed significant increases in white blood cell counts and other inflammatory markers, indicating a strong inflammatory response. However, the dogs that received leukoreduced packed red blood cells, which had the white blood cells removed, did not show any increase in these markers. This suggests that using leukoreduced blood can help prevent inflammation during transfusions in dogs.
People also search for: dog blood transfusion inflammation · leukoreduced blood for dogs · dog blood transfusion side effects
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Removal of leukocytes (LR) has been shown to eliminate or attenuate many of the adverse effects of transfusion in experimental animals and humans. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: Transfusion of stored packed red blood cells (pRBCs) is associated with an inflammatory response in dogs and prestorage LR attenuates the inflammatory response. ANIMALS: Thirteen random-source, clinically healthy, medium and large breed dogs. METHODS: Experimental study. On day 0, animals were examined and baseline blood samples were collected for analysis. Whole blood was then collected for processing with and without LR, and stored as pRBC. Twenty-one days later, stored pRBCs were transfused back to the donor. Blood samples were collected before and 1 and 3 days after transfusion. RESULTS: In the dogs that received non-LR pRBCs (n = 6) there was a significant increase from baseline in white blood cell count from a mean (SD) of 8.20 (2.74) to 13.95 (4.60) × 10(3) cells/μL (P < .001) and in segmented neutrophil count from a mean (SD) of 5.76 (2.70) to 11.91 (4.71) × 10(3) cells/μL (P < .001). There were also significant increases in fibrinogen from a mean (SD) of 129.7 (24.2) to 268.6 (46.7) mg/dL (P < .001) and C-reactive protein from a mean (SD) of 1.9 (2.1) to 78.3 (39.3) μg/mL (P < .001). There was no significant increase from baseline in any of the markers in the dogs that received LR pRBC (n = 5). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: There is a profound inflammatory response to transfusion in normal dogs, which is eliminated by LR of the pRBC units.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20666981/