Since its initial invention by the French worker Milian in 1901, the bleeding time has been put forward as a clinically useful test in three contexts: diagnosis (particularly of platelet disorders), prediction of clinically important bleeding, and assessment of the adequacy of various forms of therapy. Attempting a complete review of the published experience with this test, we assessed 862 articles. Original bleeding time data appeared in 664 of these articles, from which we tabulated 1083 distinct studies in humans. ROC analysis, which characterizes the sensitivity and specificity of the test, was applied in every instance in which published data were adequate (34 studies). ROCs from 27 studies of the bleeding time in association with aspirin ingestion reveal high variability in the ability of the bleeding time to detect aspirin intake, and provide evidence against claims that recently devised bleeding time methods have improved discriminatory ability based on improved reproducibility. Two ROCs from surgical studies, in which the bleeding time was used to try to predict abnormal bleeding, were statistically indistinguishable from that of a completely noninformative test. In ROCs from five studies of abnormal bleeding in uremia, the test performed approximately the same as the platelet count or hematocrit (taken singly); in one of these studies, prothrombin consumption was determined and was a better predictor of bleeding than bleeding time, hematocrit, or platelet count. In the settings of renal biopsy (one study) and massive transfusion (one study), data allowed estimation of predictive value: in no instance was there evidence that the bleeding time significantly altered a priori estimates (based on prevalence) of the risk of bleeding. Linear regression analysis was applied to data from 23 studies relating platelet count to bleeding time, to assess published claims that the bleeding time and platelet count follow a predictively useful linear relationship. In 22 of 23 instances, the inverse relationship between bleeding time and platelet count was associated with broad statistical scatter, making it impossible to predict precisely one variable given the other. The pathophysiology of an abnormal bleeding time remains poorly understood. The bleeding time is affected by a large number of diseases, drugs, physiologic factors, test conditions, and therapeutic actions, not all of them platelet-related. The test is likely to remain widely used for the diagnosis of inherited disorders of platelet function, such as von Willebrand's syndrome, despite the lack of clear criteria for its use in this context.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Background-The risk of preoperative anemia in patients undergoing heart surgery has not been described precisely.Specifically, the impact of low hemoglobin per se or combined with other risk factors on postoperative outcome is unknown. Thus, we determined the effects of low preoperative hemoglobin and comorbidities on postoperative adverse outcomes in patients with coronary artery bypass graft in a large comprehensive multicenter study. Methods and Results-The Multicenter Study of Perioperative Ischemia investigated 5065 patients with coronary artery bypass graft at 70 institutions worldwide, collecting Ϸ7500 data points per patient. In 4804 patients who received no preoperative transfusions, we determined the association between lowest preoperative hemoglobin levels and in-hospital cardiac and noncardiac morbidity and mortality and the impact of concomitant risk factors, assessed by EuroSCORE, on this effect. In patients with EuroSCORE Ͻ4 (nϭ2054), only noncardiac outcomes were increased, whereas patients with EuroSCORE Ն4 (nϭ2750) showed an increased incidence of all postoperative events, starting at hemoglobin Ͻ11 g/dL. Low preoperative hemoglobin was an independent predictor for noncardiac (renalϾcerebral; PϽ0.001) outcomes, whereas the increase in cardiac events was due to other factors associated with preoperative anemia. Conclusions-Anemic patients undergoing cardiac surgery have an increased risk of postoperative adverse events.Importantly, the extent of preexisting comorbidities substantially affects perioperative anemia tolerance. Therefore, preoperative risk assessment and subsequent therapeutic strategies, such as blood transfusion, should take into account both the individual level of preoperative hemoglobin and the extent of concomitant risk factors.
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