75% off all plans

Massive Transfusion Protocol

On this page

MTP Basics - Code Red Start!

  • Massive Transfusion (MT): Defined as:

    • 10 units PRBCs in 24h

    • 4 units PRBCs in 1h

    • Replacement of > 50% blood volume in 3h
    • Bleeding > 150 mL/min
  • Triggers/Activation Criteria:

    • Clinical signs: Hemorrhagic shock (SBP < 90 mmHg, HR > 120 bpm)
    • Scoring systems: ABC Score (Assessment of Blood Consumption)
    • Specific injuries: Penetrating torso trauma, pelvic fractures, major vascular injury.

⭐ A common definition of MTP is the replacement of one entire blood volume in 24 hours, or the transfusion of >10 units of PRBCs in 24 hours.

Blood Buffet - The Perfect Mix

  • MTP Goals: Restore volume, ↑ O₂ capacity, correct coagulopathy, prevent lethal triad (acidosis, hypothermia, coagulopathy).
  • Blood Products & Typical Volumes/Contents:
    • PRBCs: ~250-350 mL; ↑ Hb by ~1 g/dL, ↑ O₂ capacity.
    • FFP: ~200-250 mL; all clotting factors, fibrinogen.
    • Platelets (apheresis unit): ~200-300 mL; ~3 x $10^{11}$ platelets.
    • Cryoprecipitate: ~10-20 mL/unit; concentrated fibrinogen (≥150mg), FVIII, FXIII, vWF.
  • Target Ratio: 1:1:1 (PRBC:FFP:Platelets).
    • Rationale: Mimics whole blood, prevents dilutional coagulopathy, improves survival.

⭐ Early administration of FFP and platelets in a balanced ratio (typically 1:1:1) with PRBCs is crucial to prevent dilutional coagulopathy and improve outcomes in massively bleeding trauma patients.

MTP Mayhem - Dodging Dangers

📌 Lethal Triad: AHC (Acidosis, Hypothermia, Coagulopathy)

  • Hypothermia (Target >35°C)
    • Cause: Cold blood.
    • Mgmt: Blood warmers, warming.
  • Acidosis (Metabolic) (pH <7.35)
    • Cause: Stored blood, hypoperfusion.
    • Mgmt: Correct shock, judicious $HCO_3^{-}$.
  • Hypocalcemia (Citrate Toxicity) (Ionized Ca <1.1 mmol/L)
    • Cause: Citrate in PRBCs chelates Ca.
    • Mgmt: 1g CaCl2 or 3g Ca gluconate / 4U PRBC.

    ⭐ Hypocalcemia due to citrate anticoagulation in blood products is a common and rapidly developing complication of MTP, requiring empirical or guided calcium replacement to prevent myocardial depression and coagulopathy.

  • Hyperkalemia (K+ >5.5 mEq/L)
    • Cause: K+ from old PRBCs.
    • Mgmt: Monitor, fresh blood, temporize.
  • Dilutional Coagulopathy
    • Cause: Factor/platelet dilution.
    • Mgmt: 1:1:1 ratio, TEG/ROTEM.
  • TRALI (Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury)
    • Cause: Donor Abs vs. recipient WBCs.
    • Mgmt: Supportive ventilation.
  • TACO (Transfusion-Associated Circulatory Overload)
    • Cause: Fluid overload.
    • Mgmt: Diuretics, slow rate, monitor.

Vital Vigilance - Tracking & Tweaking

  • Lab Monitoring (Serial):
    • Hb, Hct, Platelet count.
    • Coagulation: PT/INR, aPTT, Fibrinogen (target >1.5-2.0 g/L).
    • ABG: pH, lactate, base deficit, K+, Ca++ (ionized).
  • Viscoelastic Hemostatic Assays (VHA):
    • TEG/ROTEM: Guide goal-directed therapy, identify specific coagulopathy.
  • Key Adjuncts & Targets:
    • Tranexamic Acid (TXA): 1g IV over 10 min within 3h injury, then 1g IV over 8h.
    • Calcium: Replace (esp. with citrate); monitor ionized Ca++.
    • Blood Warmers: Maintain normothermia (prevents worsening coagulopathy).
    • Permissive Hypotension: Target SBP 80-90 mmHg (if no TBI) until definitive hemorrhage control.

⭐ Tranexamic acid (TXA) administered within 3 hours of injury in bleeding trauma patients significantly reduces mortality from hemorrhage, primarily by inhibiting fibrinolysis.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • MTP triggered by anticipated need for >10 units PRBCs/24h or >4 units/1h.
  • Aim for 1:1:1 ratio of PRBC:FFP:Platelets to mimic whole blood.
  • Tranexamic acid (TXA) crucial; administer within 3 hours of injury.
  • Monitor for and manage "Lethal Triad": hypothermia, acidosis, coagulopathy.
  • Watch for complications: hypocalcemia (citrate toxicity), hyperkalemia, TRALI, TACO.
  • Thromboelastography (TEG/ROTEM) guides component therapy.
  • Part of Damage Control Resuscitation (DCR) strategy.

Continue reading on OnCourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy AI Tutor

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, our AI tutor, to explain anything you didn't understand

Practice Questions: Massive Transfusion Protocol

Test your understanding with these related questions

What is the volume threshold that defines a massive blood transfusion?

1 of 5

Flashcards: Massive Transfusion Protocol

1/4

Minimizing _____ based resuscitation is a part of balanced resuscitation (damage control resuscitation)

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Minimizing _____ based resuscitation is a part of balanced resuscitation (damage control resuscitation)

crystalloid

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE
Rezzy AI Tutor
Massive Transfusion Protocol – NEET-PG Anesthesiology Notes | Oncourse