Receiving a Blood Transfusion
Before you receive a
blood transfusion, your blood is tested to
determine your blood type. Blood or blood components
that are compatible with your
blood type are ordered by the doctor. This blood may
be retested in the hospital laboratory to confirm its type. A sample of your
blood is then mixed with a sample of the blood you will receive to check that
no problems result, such as red blood cell destruction (hemolysis) or clotting.
This process of checking blood types and mixing samples of the two blood
sources is called typing and crossmatching.
Before actually giving you the transfusion, the doctor and nurses
will each examine the label on the package of blood and compare it to your
blood type as listed on your medical record. Only when all agree that this is
the correct blood and that you are the correct recipient will the transfusion
begin. Giving you the wrong blood type can result in a mild to serious
transfusion reaction.
If you have banked your own blood in preparation for surgery
(autologous donation), typing and crossmatching is not needed, but the doctors
and nurses still examine the label to confirm that it is the blood you donated
and that you are the right recipient. For more information on this option,
see:
Should I bank blood before having
surgery?
Sometimes a doctor will recommend that you take
acetaminophen (such as Tylenol),
antihistamines (such as Benadryl), or other medicines
to help prevent mild reactions, like a fever or
hives, from a blood transfusion. Your doctor can treat
more severe reactions as they occur.
To receive the transfusion, you will have an intravenous (IV)
catheter inserted into a vein. A tube connects the catheter to the bag
containing the transfusion, which is placed higher than your body. The
transfusion then flows slowly into your vein. A doctor or nurse will check you
several times during the transfusion to watch for a transfusion reaction or
other problem.