2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-2824.2011.01525.x
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Evidence behind the pathophysiology of TRALI

Abstract: Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is a serious transfusion complication that may lead to significant morbidity and mortality. This has driven a significant research effort focused on understanding why and how TRALI develops. The ultimate goal must be prevention or at least mitigation of the clinical consequences of TRALI.The underlying pathophysiology of TRALI is presently best described by two hypotheses which are not mutually exclusive. These are the antibody mediated TRALI mechanism and the two-… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…TRALI is the leading cause of transfusion-related mortality, and results from one of two mechanisms: 1) Non-antibody mediated, resultant from the transfusion of stored cell-containing blood products; and, 2) Antibody mediated, in which donor antibodies are passively transfused (85). The end result of either is recipient neutrophil activation, disruption of the pulmonary endothelium, fluid leak, and pulmonary edema progressing to acute lung injury (86). Plasma and Platelet transfusions are both associated with increased risk of TRALI relative to red blood cell transfusion (87).…”
Section: Conmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TRALI is the leading cause of transfusion-related mortality, and results from one of two mechanisms: 1) Non-antibody mediated, resultant from the transfusion of stored cell-containing blood products; and, 2) Antibody mediated, in which donor antibodies are passively transfused (85). The end result of either is recipient neutrophil activation, disruption of the pulmonary endothelium, fluid leak, and pulmonary edema progressing to acute lung injury (86). Plasma and Platelet transfusions are both associated with increased risk of TRALI relative to red blood cell transfusion (87).…”
Section: Conmentioning
confidence: 99%