Effect of microaggregate filter passage on feline whole blood stored for 35 days

Author:

Morse Sophia A1ORCID,Mooney Erin T1

Affiliation:

1. Sydney School of Veterinary Science, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia

Abstract

Objectives The aim of this study was to compare the characteristics of fresh and stored feline red blood cells (RBCs) after passage through an 18 μm microaggregate filter. Methods Nine cats were recruited for a single blood donation using an open collection system. A simulated transfusion using a syringe driver and microaggregate filter was performed over 2 h with half the blood on the day of donation and the other half after 35 days of storage. Differences in haematological parameters, haemolysis percentage and osmotic fragility (OF) were compared on the day of donation pre-filter passage (D0–) vs day of donation post-filter (D0+) or day 35 storage pre-filter (D35–) and post-filter (D35+). Blood was cultured at D0+ and D35+. Results There were no statistically significant differences in the D0– vs D0+ comparisons. There were statistically significant ( P <0.05) increases in haemolysis percentage, red cell distribution width (RDW) percentage and mean OF, and decreases in packed cell volume (PCV), RBC count, haemoglobin and haematocrit for D0– vs D35–. The same was found for D0– vs D35+ with the addition of a significant increase in mean cell haemoglobin (MCH). For D35– vs D35+ only MCH significantly increased. At day 35, 6/9 units had haemolysis percentages that exceeded 1%. This increased to 8/9 of stored units post-filter passage. All blood units cultured negative. Conclusions and relevance Fresh RBCs exhibited no in vitro evidence of injury following passage through an 18 μm microaggregate filter. Increased MCH was observed in the stored blood and may represent haemolysis induced by the filter. All other changes can be explained by storage lesion rather than filter passage. The findings highlight the importance of blood banking quality controls and the need for further research to assess the effects of transfusion technique, specifically filter passage, on storage lesion-affected feline blood.

Funder

Sydney School of Veterinary Science

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Small Animals

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