what kind of a chart can i make with this info???

Examples Of Blood Use--Average # Of Units Required

Automobile Accident :50 units of blood

Heart Surgery :6 units of blood
6 units of platelets

Organ Transplant :40 units of blood
30 units of platelets
20 bags of cryoprecipitate
25 units of fresh frozen plasma

Bone Marrow Transplant :120 units of platelets
20 units of blood

Burn :20 units of platelets

and if u would be so kind as to make one u could email it to me :D plz
ty
ill take any help i can get ty


I'd just list the clinical situations down the X axis and the components across the Y axis, but you should correct the "blood" to read "Packed red blood cells" (or PRBC's for short), since that, and not whole blood, is what's actually used. In addition to PRBC's, Plt's, FFP, and cryo, you might even throw in CaCl2.


histograph or bar graph

Blood Component Processing

a variety of medical conditions or illnesses. Get a behind the scenes look at how blood components are prepared. ... donate blood donation ...

Marvin Shilmer: Plasma, Cryoprecipitate and Cryosupernatant

A cold centrifuge process is employed to make the products known as cryoprecipitate and cryosupernatant. By freezing and controlled thawing together with centrifuging, plasma is separated into two different concentrations. One of these is called cryoprecipitate and contains a concentration of cryoglobulins such as Factor VIII, von Willebran factor and fibrinogen. The second is called cryosupernatant and it has a reduced concentration of cryoglobulins. After centrifuging the bag of plasma is placed in an expressor apparatus and the cryosupernatant is slowly expressed (squeezed) away into a satellite bag. The portion remaining in the original bag is termed cryoprecipitate. The portion expressed into the satellite bag is termed cryosupernatant.[1] Together cryoprecipitate and cryosupernatant are 100 percent of the original plasma. Cryoprecipitate and cryosupernatant are plasma with differing concentrations of cryoglobulins. The constituents of these products are the same. The sole difference is the concentration of those constituents. That is to say, there is nothing found in one of these products that is not also found in the other as a constituent. By far the primary difference between these two blood products is that one contains nearly all the original water of the donated plasma.

Cryoprecipitate - News


Forrest County to hold blood drive
Cryoprecipitate contains blood clotting proteins and is used to treat or prevent bleeding. Everyone who donates blood and their dependents are covered for and more »

Celebrate World Blood Donor Day today
to a Red Cross blood component laboratory where it is processed into several components (eg, red blood cells, plasma, platelets and/or cryoprecipitate). and more »

Cryonics Directory

Cryoprecipitate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cryoprecipitate, also called "Cryoprecipitated Antihemophilic Factor", "Cryoprecipitated ... Cryoprecipitate was originally known as "Cryoprecipitate AHF", where ...

Blood Component Therapy | Cryoprecipitate (CRYO)
Cryoprecipitate is the only adequate fibrinogen concentrate available for intravenous use. ... Cryoprecipitate is sometimes useful if platelet dysfunction ...

Cryoprecipitate: Discussion
Discussion: The type of coagulation factors and proteins in cryoprecipitate determine the appropriate indications for its use.

Cryoprecipitate | Clinlabnavigator
Cryoprecipitate refers to the proteins that precipitate out of solution when a unit of fresh frozen plasma is slowly thawed in the cold at 1 to 6o ...