multi-organ failure due to massive transfusion-induced coagulopathy following retroperitoneal haemorrhage of unknown source
AI-generated summary
A 77-year-old woman died from multi-organ failure following massive transfusion-induced coagulopathy after a retroperitoneal haemorrhage of unknown origin post-knee replacement surgery. While Fragmin anticoagulation was appropriately prescribed, the critical issue was inadequate fresh frozen plasma replacement during massive transfusion. The anaesthetist fell behind the recommended 1:2 ratio of plasma to red cells because initial plasma units were unavailable as expected, and subsequent delays occurred obtaining more. Expert evidence established that maintaining appropriate plasma-to-red cell ratios during massive transfusion is essential to prevent coagulopathy, and that the patient would have had a 'reasonable chance' of survival had these ratios been maintained. Key lessons: establish robust transfusion protocols for massive haemorrhage, ensure real-time tracking of transfused products, and maintain appropriate coagulation support ratios to prevent iatrogenic coagulopathy.
AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes. Report an inaccuracy.
inadequate fresh frozen plasma replacement during massive transfusion
anaesthetist fell behind optimal 1:2 ratio of plasma to red cells
delay in obtaining fresh frozen plasma during first laparotomy
unavailability of expected fresh frozen plasma units
use of Haemacel resulting in haemodilution during second laparotomy
inability to locate source of retroperitoneal bleeding
poor record-keeping and communication of transfused products across different clinical areas
Coroner's recommendations
The Repatriation General Hospital should gain representation on the Flinders Medical Centre Transfusion Committee, or establish a Transfusion Committee of its own
The Transfusion Committee should consider ways in which transfusion data might be better recorded and made contemporaneously available to clinicians, particularly in cases of massive transfusion and emergency surgery
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