1995
DOI: 10.1016/0278-2391(95)90273-2
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Average blood loss and the risk of requiring perioperative blood transfusion in 506 orthognathic surgical procedures

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Cited by 79 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…Various techniques have been developed to minimize blood loss during orthognathic surgery, including careful surgical handling and utilization of induced hypotensive anaesthesia 11,16,17,19 . These techniques can reduce bleeding, but the risk of haemorrhage and the subsequent need for blood transfusion remains 10,16,17 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Various techniques have been developed to minimize blood loss during orthognathic surgery, including careful surgical handling and utilization of induced hypotensive anaesthesia 11,16,17,19 . These techniques can reduce bleeding, but the risk of haemorrhage and the subsequent need for blood transfusion remains 10,16,17 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…25 For orthognatic surgery, double-jaw procedures result in more blood loss than single-jaw procedures, boys have a higher average blood loss than girls, but average blood loss is not significantly affected by patients' age. 26 For pediatric open heart surgery, risk factors clearly associated with increased blood loss include: age less than one month, body weight under 8 kg, complexity of the procedure (arterial switches for transposition of the great vessels, Fontan procedures, Glenn shunts and truncus arteriosus repairs), duration of cardiopulmonary bypass, resternotomy, and low platelet count during cardiopulmonary bypass. 1,5,[27][28][29][30] For pediatric liver transplants, apart from retransplantation, factors that have been associated with increased intraoperative blood losses include: hypoplastic portal vein, use of a reduced-size liver graft, requirement of in-hospital supportive care, intra-abdominal malformations and signs of severe liver failure (encephalopathy, ascites, prolonged PT).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both retrospective and prospective studies were accepted, no matter if the procedures were done in normotension, mild hypotension, controlled hypotension, or any other tension reported 3.1.1. Mandibular surgery and transfusion need Among the papers that included a subgroup of lower jaw surgery, all but Garg et al (2010) 6 mentioned the transfusion need ( 4,[6][7][8][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] These papers were published between1985-2011 and present a total of 9 homologous transfusions and 14 autologous blood transfusions in 1705 BSSO procedures (advancement and set-back). The four papers indicating a transfusion have their data extracted from the period [1981][1982][1983][1984][1985][1986][1987][1988][1989][1990][1991][1992][1993][1994][1995][1996].…”
Section: Search Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4). Four patients in the group with the predonation policy (Table 18) received homologous blood: one in the series of Posnick et al (2010) 56 who did not predonate, and three in the series of Moenning et al (1995) 17 were patients that received both autologous and additional homologous blood. Total: 22 patients in the predonation policy group received a blood transfusion.…”
Section: -199mentioning
confidence: 99%