Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2725580 | The American Journal of Medicine | 2010 | 8 Pages |
The general medicine and critical care services often care for patients that require therapeutic apheresis. Apheresis procedures are performed for various hematologic, neurological, renal, autoimmune, metabolic, and other indications. To facilitate a prompt start to the procedure, the clinical team must coordinate efforts with several services, including those that perform the apheresis procedure, establish venous access, and provide blood or replacement products, in addition to the pharmacy and clinical laboratory. Some of these tasks are performed typically by the clinical teams, while others are performed typically by the apheresis team. Presented and discussed are the indications for therapeutic apheresis, calculations for the ordering of blood products, and several important and practical details to consider, thus preventing delays in starting the apheresis procedure.