Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to determine the changes in fetal hemorheologic parameters caused by fetal intravascular transfusion for alloimmune anemia. STUDY DESIGN: Fetal blood samples were collected before and after 95 fetal transfusions in 31 women. Fetal hematocrit, whole-blood viscosity at a variety of shear rates, plasma viscosity, fetal fibrinogen, and fetal plasma proteins were measured. RESULTS: Fetal whole-blood viscosity increased, sometimes massively, with transfusion. The rise in viscosity was principally dependent on the rise in hematocrit, with a linear rise in hematocrit producing a linear rise in the logarithm of whole-blood viscosity, but was also affected by the amount of adult plasma proteins present in the donor blood. CONCLUSIONS: Rises in fetal whole-blood viscosity during transfusion can be minimized by using donor blood that has been serum depleted to a high hematocrit (>90%) and by restricting the end hematocrit to 50% to 55%. (AM J OBSTET GYNECOL 1994;170:726-32.)

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