When blood is not an option: Optimal bloodless management of severe anemia in pregnancy.
Standard treatment for severe anemia in pregnancy is allogeneic blood transfusion, but this is not acceptable to all patients. Options for alternative anemia treatment are available. In this case report, a 32-year-old G2P1 woman who was a Jehovah's Witness presented at 27 weeks gestation with dyspnea, palpitations, and severe anemia (hemoglobin 2.8 g/dL) related to chronic rectal bleeding. She declined blood transfusion. An anemia management protocol (high-dose erythropoietin-stimulating agent, iron, vitamin D, vitamin C, folate, vitamin B12) rapidly increased endogenous erythropoiesis. After 12 days, hemoglobin increased to 8 g/dL. A bovine hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier was available for acute bleeding but was not used. This case highlights that early initiation of multimodal therapy can adequately increase endogenous erythropoiesis to treat life-threatening anemia in antepartum patients who do not accept blood transfusion.
Duke Scholars
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- Pregnancy
- Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine
- Jehovah's Witnesses
- Iron
- Humans
- Hemoglobins
- Female
- Blood Transfusion
- Anemia
- Adult
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Pregnancy
- Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine
- Jehovah's Witnesses
- Iron
- Humans
- Hemoglobins
- Female
- Blood Transfusion
- Anemia
- Adult