Arm complications after manual whole blood donation and their impact.

Bruce Newman
Author Information
  1. Bruce Newman: American Red Cross Blood Services, Southeastern Michigan Region, Detroit, MI 48232, USA. bruce.newman@redcross.org

Abstract

Arm complications after whole blood donation occur in approximately 30% of donations. The 2 most common arm complications are contusion/hematoma (23%) and arm pain (10%). A variety of arm complications were evaluated from a national donor complication database, clinical studies, and review of the literature. The incidence of nerve injuries, arterial punctures, contusions/hematomas, and other complications were based on observations and reports at blood drives, interviews 3 weeks after donations, and donor reports of outside medical care. The clinical course of each complication is described.

MeSH Term

Adult
Aneurysm, False
Arm Injuries
Arteriovenous Fistula
Blood Donors
Compartment Syndromes
Complex Regional Pain Syndromes
Contusions
Drug Hypersensitivity
Female
Hematoma
Humans
Incidence
Male
Michigan
Pain
Peripheral Nerve Injuries
Phlebotomy
Radial Artery
Venous Thrombosis

Word Cloud

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