Dictionary Definition
bloodless adj
1 destitute of blood or apparently so; "the
bloodless carcass of my Hector sold"- John Dryden [syn: exsanguine, exsanguinous]
2 free from blood or bloodshed; "bloodless
surgery"; "a bloodless coup" [ant: bloody]
3 without vigor or zest or energy; "an insipid
and bloodless young man"
4 devoid of human emotion or feeling; "charts of
bloodless economic indicators"
5 ash-colored or anemic looking from illness or
emotion; "a face turned ashen"; "the invalid's blanched cheeks";
"tried to speak with bloodless lips"; "a face livid with shock";
"lips...livid with the hue of death"- Mary W. Shelley; "lips white
with terror"; "a face white with rage" [syn: ashen, blanched, livid, white]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
Extensive Definition
Bloodless surgery is a term that was popularized
at the beginning of the 20th Century
by the practice of an internationally famous orthopedic
surgeon, Dr. Adolf Lorenz
who was known as “the bloodless surgeon of Vienna.” This
expression reflected Dr. Lorenz’s methods for treating patients
with noninvasive techniques. His medical practice was a consequence
of his severe allergy to
carbolic
acid routinely used in operating
rooms of the era. His condition forced him to become a “dry
surgeon”.
Contemporary usage of "bloodless surgery" refers
to both invasive and noninvasive medical techniques and protocols.
The term is somewhat confusing. The expression does not mean
surgery that makes no use of blood or blood
transfusion. Rather, it refers to surgery performed without
transfusion of allogeneic blood.
Champions of bloodless surgery do, however, transfuse products made
from allogeneic blood and they also make use of predonated blood
for autologous transfusion. The last twenty years have witnessed a
surge of interest in bloodless surgery, for a variety of reasons.
Jehovah's
Witnesses
reject blood transfusions on religious grounds; others may be
concerned about bloodborne
diseases, such as hepatitis and AIDS.
Principles of bloodless surgery
Several principles of bloodless surgery have been
published.
Preoperative techniques such as erythropoietin (EPO) or
iron administration are designed to stimulate the patient's own
erythropoiesis.
In surgery, control of bleeding is achieved with
the use of laser or sonic scalpels, minimally
invasive surgical techniques, electrocautery, low central
venous pressure anesthesia (for select cases), or suture ligation
of vessels. Other methods include the use of blood
substitutes, which at present do not carry oxygen but expand
the volume of the blood to prevent shock.
Blood substitutes which do carry oxygen, such as PolyHeme, are also
under development. Many doctors view acute normovolemic
hemodilution, a form of storage of a patient's own blood, as a
pillar of "bloodless surgery" but the technique is not an option
for patients who refuse autologous blood transfusions.
The
Cell Saver is a device which recycles and cleans blood from a
patient during an operation and redirects it into the patient's
body, a technique called
intraoperative blood salvage or cell salvage.
Postoperatively, surgeons seek to minimize
further blood loss by continuing administration of medications to
augment blood cell mass and minimizing the number of blood draws
and the quantity of blood drawn for testing, for example by using
pediatric blood tubes for adult patients. These costs are further
increased as, according to Jan Hoffman (an administrator for the
blood conservation program at Geisinger
Medical Center in Danville,
Pennsylvania), hospitals must pick up the tab for the first
three units of blood infused per patient per calendar year. By
contrast, hospitals may be reimbursed for drugs that boost a
patient's red blood cell count, a treatment approach often used
before and after surgery to reduce the need for a blood
transfusion. Geisinger Medical Center began a blood conservation
program in 2005 and reported a recorded savings of $273,000 in its
first six months of operation.http://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/stories/2006/03/27/story8.html?page=2
Hospitals and medical centers with bloodless medicine programs
United States
- Legacy Good Samaritan, Portland, Oregonhttp://www.legacyhealth.org/
- Legacy Emanual Hospital, Portland, Oregonhttp://www.legacyhealth.org/
- Legacy Salmon Creek, Vancouver, Washingtonhttp://www.legacyhealth.org/
- Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, Washington
- The University Hospital, Newark, New Jersey
- Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, Englewood, New Jersey
- Meriter Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin
- Community Hospital of Los Gatos, Los Gatos, California
- Franklin Square Hospital Center, Baltimore, Maryland
- Sharp Chula Vista Medical Center, San Diego, California
- Atlanta Medical Center, Atlanta, Georgia
- Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Baptist Health Inc., Jacksonville, Florida
- Mercy Medical Center, Canton, Ohio
- Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Florida
- Jersey Shore University Medical Center, Neptune, New Jersey
- CHRISTUS St. John Hospital, Nassau Bay, Texas http://www.christusstjohn.org/ser_blood_conservation.htm
- Creighton University Medical Center,http://www.creightonhospital.com Omaha, Nebraska
- Crittenton Hospital Medical Center,http://www.crittenton.com, Rochester, MI
References
Further information about bloodless surgery
- Thomas Kickler M.D. on Bloodless Surgery
- Cell Salvage
- Outline of bloodless management techniques
- Bloodless Management Care Guide
- Bloodless surgery helps save lives - Imperial College, London
- noblood.org - A 'virtual community' for healthcare professionals and others who wish to discuss bloodless medicine
- Society for the Advancement of Blood Management
- Jehovah's Witnesses on blood
- Time article on bloodless surgery
- MSNBC article
See also
- Knocking, a documentary on Jehovah's Witnesses that features a bloodless liver transplant
- Autotransfusion, - the process of returning to a patient their own blood that has been lost.
bloodless in Hungarian: Vér nélküli
sebészet
bloodless in Japanese: 無輸血治療
bloodless in Chinese: 無血手術
bloodless in Spanish: Tratamientos alternativos
a las transfusiones de sangre
bloodless in Portuguese: Alternativas médicas ao
sangue
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
achromatic, achromic, anemic, anesthetic, arid, ashen, ashy, asthenic, at peace, barren, blah, blank, bled white, cadaverous, calm, characterless, chicken, chloranemic, cold, colorless, concordant, cowardly, dead, deadly pale, deathly pale,
debilitated,
dim, dimmed, dingy, discolored, dismal, draggy, drearisome, dreary, drooping, droopy, dry, dryasdust, dull, dusty, effete, elephantine, empty, etiolated, exsanguinated, exsanguine, exsanguineous, fade, faded, faint, faintish, fallow, feeble, flabby, flaccid, flat, floppy, ghastly, gone, gray, gutless, haggard, halcyon, hard, heavy, ho-hum, hollow, hueless, hypochromic, idyllic, imbecile, impassible, impotent, inane, inexcitable, insensate, insensitive, insipid, jejune, lackluster, languid, languorous, leaden, lifeless, limber, limp, listless, livid, low-spirited, lurid, lusterless, lustless, marrowless, mat, mealy, muddy, nerveless, neutral, orderly, pacific, pale, pale as death, pale-faced,
pallid, pastoral, pasty, peaceable, peaceful, peacetime, pedestrian, piping, pithless, plodding, pointless, poky, ponderous, pooped, powerless, quiet, restful, rocky, rubbery, sallow, sapless, serene, sickly, sinewless, slack, slow, soft, solemn, spineless, spiritless, sterile, stiff, stodgy, strengthless, stuffy, superficial, tallow-faced,
tasteless, tedious, toneless, tranquil, uncolored, unhardened, unlively, unnerved, unstrung, untroubled, vapid, wan, washed-out, waterish, watery, waxen, weak, weakly, whey-faced, white, wooden