My mom's hemoglobin is 6.8 and the dialysis nurse is asking us to go to the ER to get a blood transfusion. We are a little hesitant if we should just wait instead for her hgb to rise because of possible infections that could happen during a transfusion. Is it safe for hemodialysis patients to get a blood transfusion? T
Transfusions have an additional "cost" to anyone considering a renal transplant.
Read up on alloimmunization. It's the reason transfusions can increase the PRA for a transplant candidate, and also why "transfusion history" is a part of the medical writeup on a transplant patient or candidate.
I dipped down to 6.2 after my hip replacement surgery. I chased away residents who were ordering a transfusion to be given with dialysis in the hospital. At one point, a fellow who was ordering a transfusion had to be talked out of it by the chief of hematology at the hospital. Surprisingly, this was on a dedicated renal floor where the MDs should have known better. I've even met MDs who have never heard of this particular issue.
It took about 6 weeks post surgery for me to get back up to 10, and I was sentenced to clinic treatments until I hit 8.5. At one point, I was taking 50,000 units of EPO per week.
I finally got back to a "normal" 10-11 HGB, with no transfusions or complications.
Blood draws can lower HGB if there are enough of them. I was told I lost about .2 HGB from the blood draws when I was in for 17 days - morning labs every day, and at least three cultures (which consist of two small bottles, not tubes, of blood)