Bone marrow procurement
Anesthesia type |
GA vs spinal |
---|---|
Airway |
ETT (if GA) vs natural airway (if spinal) |
Lines and access |
1 PIV |
Monitors |
Standard ASA monitors |
Primary anesthetic considerations | |
Preoperative | |
Intraoperative |
Very aggressive fluids. |
Postoperative |
PONV and postop pain are common |
Article quality | |
Editor rating | |
User likes | 0 |
Bone marrow procurement is performed on generally healthy patients who are donating to someone with leukemia. Procurement is typically done on the hip bones (e.g. iliac crest).
Overview
Indications
Bone marrow donation
Surgical procedure
Long ports are inserted into bone marrow and syringes are used to aspirate. Typically done on hip bones in the prone position.
Preoperative management
Patient evaluation
Donors are typically relatively healthy.
System | Considerations |
---|---|
Airway | |
Neurologic | |
Cardiovascular | |
Pulmonary | |
Gastrointestinal | |
Hematologic | |
Renal | |
Endocrine | |
Other |
Labs and studies
Operating room setup
Patient preparation and premedication
Regional and neuraxial techniques
Can be done with spinal, though because of prone positioning, lots of movement, and occasionally lengthy procedure, this is relatively uncomfortable for the patient. Using GA with ETT is generally preferred for this reason.
Intraoperative management
Monitoring and access
Induction and airway management
Positioning
Prone
Maintenance and surgical considerations
- Generally no antibiotics needed
- Avoid nitrous oxide (myelosuppression)
- Avoid steroids (immunosuppression)
- Aggressive fluid repletion, generally ~3:1 repletion with crystalloid. Albumin is often used as well.
- Can do the case with 1 20G PIV, but easier to keep up with fluid repletion if it is 18G or greater or if have a second IV
- Procedure can be quite painful, consider Dilaudid for postop
- Pretty emetogenic, consider TIVA, scopolamine patch, etc
- Usually harvest 850cc to 1.5L (depends on cell count)
Emergence
Postoperative management
Disposition
PACU
Pain management
Potential complications
Procedure variants
Variant 1 | Variant 2 | |
---|---|---|
Unique considerations | ||
Indications | ||
Position | ||
Surgical time | ||
EBL | ||
Postoperative disposition | ||
Pain management | ||
Potential complications |
References
Top contributors: Tony Wang