Tasty Morsels of Critical Care

Tasty Morsels of Critical Care 094 | Haemoglobin targets in critical care

Mar 30, 2026
They dig into when to give blood and why transfusion targets matter in critical care. Storage lesions and how donated red cells change over time get a clear rundown. Important transfusion reactions and complications are reviewed. Evidence from trials across sepsis, surgery, GI bleed, and cardiac care is traced to practical haemoglobin targets and noted exceptions for massive bleeding and brain injury.
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INSIGHT

Storage Lesions Reduce Red Cell Function

  • Stored red cells develop 'storage lesions' that impair function and add risks beyond infection.
  • Changes include shape distortion, membrane sticking, 2,3-DPG depletion, reduced NO, rising K+, and acidosis with storage time.
ANECDOTE

From Observational Signal To Randomised TRICC Story

  • Paul Hebert moved from observational TRICC data to a randomized TRICC2 trial to remove confounding and test transfusion thresholds.
  • The speaker recalls bingeing on OK Computer while describing this Canadian-led research story of the late 90s.
INSIGHT

Restrictive Transfusion Works In General ICU

  • Restrictive transfusion strategies (lower Hb) perform at least as well as liberal strategies in ICU patients.
  • TRICC randomized ~800 patients comparing Hb 7 v 10 and found the restrictive group did as well or better, prompting practice change.
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