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While most surgeons are willing to adopt minimally invasive, or
noninvasive, procedures to control bleeding during an
operation--such as laparoscopy, which requires tiny incisions,
or ultrasound to destroy kidney stones--they usually stop short
of transfusionless surgery. Some medical fundamentalists view it
as a false promise with its own risks, but even doctors who
acknowledge its value caution that it is not the panacea some
physicians think it is. Certain situations--liver transplants,
for example, and instances of trauma--will always require
transfusions. Says Dr. Steven Gould, a surgeon at the University
of Illinois at Chicago who advocates reduced surgical use of
donated blood: "Some operations require four to six units, and
when you get to that level, it's hard to imagine not getting any
blood. We will never have a completely bloodless society for
surgical patients."
Still, even as the practice seemingly thumbs its nose at
mainstream medicine's historic reliance on transfusion (more
than 14 million units were used in the U.S. last year alone), an
increasing number of physicians are taking a harder look at
bloodless medicine. According to the Jehovah's Witnesses, more
than 75,000 doctors already practice bloodless surgery in the
U.S. Also, more and more patients are clamoring for safer and
more effective options than transfusions, either because of
religious conviction or fear of contracting disease.
Medical technology has tried to answer the call. It has come up
with a panoply of methods and machinery, some of them known for
decades but refined and repackaged to fit today's needs and
concerns. While bloodless techniques vary from hospital to
hospital, they invariably begin with medicinal and nutritional
approaches to increase a patient's blood count before surgery.
Efforts are made to guard against unnecessary blood loss from
tests, and standard blood drawings are either reduced or
eliminated altogether. And since an intensive-care patient
during an average stay must part with close to a liter of blood
for testing--much of it unused and thrown out--microanalyzers
have been developed to scrutinize tinier quantities of blood.
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