Fever and autologous blood retransfusion after total knee arthroplasty
Open Access
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Medical Journals Sweden AB in Acta Orthopaedica
- Vol. 73 (3) , 321-325
- https://doi.org/10.1080/000164702320155338
Abstract
The commonest adverse reaction of autotransfusion of drain blood is an increase in temperature, probably due to a cytokine-mediated inflammatory reaction. We recorded body temperature in 21 patients operated on with a total knee prosthesis prospectively during the first 18 postoperative hours. The patients had been given an autotransfusion of autologous filtered drain blood (40 events) within the first 8-9 hours. They all had hypothermia at the end of operation, with a continuous increase in temperature during the first 12 hours whereafter the temperature slowly fell. No additional increase in temperature was seen during the first 2 hours after an autologous retransfusion. Autotransfusion of filtered drain blood within the first 8 postoperative hours after arthroplasty thus did not seem to cause an additional increase in temperature above that due to spontaneous recovery after postoperative hypothermia and surgical trauma.Keywords
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