REACTIONS TO 10,000 POOLED LIQUID HUMAN PLASMA TRANSFUSIONS
- 21 July 1945
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 128 (12) , 863-867
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1945.02860290025006
Abstract
The use of human blood plasma has become so prevalent that it is now firmly entrenched as an important part of our medical armamentarium. Since little has been reported concerning the reactions which may follow the administration of plasma,1 it was felt that a detailed analysis of the extensive data collected at the Plasma Station of Fitzsimons General Hospital would add to the knowledge of this subject. Each bottle of liquid plasma that is shipped from the Plasma Station is accompanied by a questionnaire which requests the pertinent information needed for a study of both beneficial results and reactions. The form is filled out by the attending physician and forwarded to our laboratory. Our report is based on an analysis of 10,000 such questionnaires returned from the 353 military hospitals within the continental United States provided with plasma by this station. The thousands of other plasma transfusions which haveThis publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- EXPERIENCES ASSOCIATED WITH A TRANSFUSION UNIT IN A 700 BED HOSPITAL: AN ANNUAL SURVEY OF OVER 3,500 ADMINISTRATIONS OF BLOOD AND PLASMA (DRIED)Annals of Internal Medicine, 1943
- THE ADVANTAGES AND CLINICAL USES OF DESICCATED PLASMA PREPARED BY THE ADTEVAC PROCESSAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1942
- The agglutinin‐inhibiting substance in human serumThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1942
- HEMOLYTIC REACTIONS FOLLOWING TRANSFUSIONS OF BLOOD OF THE HOMOLOGOUS GROUP, WITH THREE CASES IN WHICH THE SAME AGGLUTINOGEN WAS RESPONSIBLEAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1940