Definition | Reasons for Procedure | Possible Complications | What to Expect | Call Your Doctor

Definition

Bloodless surgery and medicine avoids using donor blood transfusions. Goals of bloodless surgery include:

  • Save and re-infuse the patient’s own blood (instead of donated blood)
  • Use medicines that will boost a patient’s blood production
  • Minimize blood loss

Reasons for Procedure

Lost blood during surgery is replaced by blood transfusions of donated blood. However, a patient may not want to receive donated blood. Reasons may include:

Bloodless surgery is an option for those who do not want or cannot have a donor blood transfusion.

There are also benefits of bloodless surgery:

  • Quicker recovery time
  • Shorter hospital stay
  • Faster wound-healing
  • Fewer blood transfusion complications

What to Expect

Your doctor will:

  • Do a medical history and physical exam
  • Order tests
  • Give you instructions to prepare for surgery

The doctor will use your own blood if a blood transfusion is needed. To prepare, a nurse will collect and store your blood. You may be given fluids through a needle in your vein (IV) to replace any blood taken. To make sure that there is enough blood to use, your doctor will create a plan to help your body make more blood. This plan may involve:

Common IV Placement

IV arm
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  • Eat foods high in iron and/or take supplements to increase the amount of iron in your blood. Iron is an important component of blood.
  • Eat foods high in vitamin C, since this vitamin helps your blood absorb iron.
  • Take folic acid.

Anesthesia may be used to block pain and keep you asleep during surgery. The anesthesiologist will carefully monitor your body temperature and blood pressure. She may reduce your temperature or blood pressure to below normal, since this is a way to slow or limit blood loss during surgery. You may be given special intravenous fluids that contain no blood elements, but can help your body deal with a loss of blood by increasing its circulating volume of fluids.

What will happen during the procedure depends on the type of surgery you will be having and many other factors. Your doctor may decide to do minimally invasive surgery. This involves making small cuts and inserting small tools to do the procedure. Open surgery, on the other hand, results in more blood loss because larger cuts are made.

To further minimize blood loss, the doctor will:

  • Limit the amount of blood samples taken
  • Give medicines to help your body increase its own blood supply or increase the amount of oxygen in your blood
  • Use special surgery tools or techniques to control bleeding

The doctor may also collect your blood using a cell saver machine. This machine will suction, wash, and filter your blood during surgery so that it can be re-infused into your body if needed.