Publication | Closed Access
Intraoperative Blood Salvage in Children and Young Adults Undergoing Spinal Surgery with Predeposited Autologous Blood: Efficacy and Cost Effectiveness
61
Citations
0
References
1993
Year
SurgeryPredeposited Autologous BloodOrthopaedic SurgeryPost-operative CareIntraoperative Blood SalvageIntraoperative SalvagePediatric SurgerySpinal OperationsPediatric SpineSpinal Cord InjuryOperative Blood LossOutcomes ResearchCost EffectivenessSpine SurgeryPatient SafetyPediatricsSpinal FusionSpinal TraumaMedicinePostoperative ConsiderationBlood Transfusion
We conducted a retrospective review of 155 spinal operations at our institution to determine the efficacy of intraoperative salvage. Addition of intraoperative salvage had little effect on the success of a preoperative autologous donation program. Only patients with operative blood loss > 2,000 ml (12% of patients) benefited from this expensive source of autologous blood. The technique tended to be most effective in children aged 16-18 years. Use of intraoperative salvage for all pediatric spinal procedures is neither necessary nor cost effective.