Blood transfusion is a potentially life-saving yet high-risk therapy. Nurses play a critical role in ensuring patient safety, preventing errors, and identifying complications promptly.
Group | RBC Surface Antigens | Plasma Antibodies |
A | A antigen | Anti-B |
B | B antigen | Anti-A |
AB | A & B | None |
O | None | Anti-A & Anti-B |
In modern transfusion therapy, blood is rarely given as whole blood. Instead, it is separated into specific components so that patients receive only what they need—making transfusion safer, more efficient, and reducing wastage.
Always check blood product with another nurse.
Most dangerous error → patient misidentification.
Never transfuse incompatible blood; risk of acute hemolytic reaction.
Start Slowly – First 15 minutes is critical; monitor for reaction signs.
Never use dextrose/LR with blood, do not add meds to blood.
At first sign of reaction: stop transfusion, maintain IV with NS, call MD.
Complete PRBC transfusion within 4 hours.
PRBC unit → Increase Hb by 1 g/dL, Hematocrit by 3%.
Platelets stored at room temp, infused in 15–30 min.
Cryoprecipitate → rich in Factor VIII & fibrinogen.
Avoid aspirin in thrombocytopenic patients.
Post-Transfusion Care – Monitor vitals, urine output, and signs of delayed reactions.
Rh Immunoprophylaxis – Give anti-D (RhoGAM) to Rh⁻ mothers after birth of Rh+ve babies.
Special Blood Products – Irradiated (prevents GVHD), leukoreduced (reduces febrile reactions).
Always use a blood administration filter to remove clots/debris.