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Revision as of 14:46, 21 September 2012

Bleeding Microchapters

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Patient Information

Overview

Classification

Bleeding Academic Research Consortium
TIMI bleeding criteria
GUSTO bleeding criteria
CURE bleeding criteria
ACUITY HORIZONS bleeding criteria
STEEPLE bleeding criteria
PLATO bleeding criteria
GRACE bleeding criteria

Causes

Treatment

Emergency Bleeding Control

Reversal of Anticoagulation and Antiplatelet in Active Bleed

Perioperative Bleeding

Anemia Management
Coagulation Monitoring
Coagulation Management
Discontinuation, Bridging, and Reversal of Anticoagulation and Antiplatelet Therapy
Antiplatelet Agents
Heparin
Fondaparinux
Vitamin K Antagonists
New Oral Anticoagulants
Comorbidities Involving Hemostatic Derangement
Specific Surgeries
Cardiovascular Surgery
Gynecological Bleeding
Obstetric Bleeding
Orthopedic/Neurosurgery
Visceral/Transplant Surgery
Pediatric Surgery
Congenital Bleeding Disorders
von Willebrand Disease
Platelet Defects
Hemophilia A and B
Factor VII Deficiency
Rare Bleeding Disorders

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Bleeding Overview

Bleeding, technically known as hemorrhage (American English), haemorrhage (British English), or hæmorrhage, is the loss of blood from the circulatory system.[1] Bleeding can occur internally, where blood leaks from blood vessels inside the body or externally, either through a natural opening such as the vagina, mouth or rectum, or through a break in the skin. The complete loss of blood is referred to as exsanguination,[2] and desanguination is a massive blood loss. Loss of 10-15% of total blood volume can be endured without clinical sequelae in a healthy person, and blood donation typically takes 8-10% of the donor's blood volume.[3]

Blood from a finger

References

  1. "Bleeding Health Article". Healthline. Retrieved 2007-06-18.
  2. "Dictionary Definitions of Exsanguination". Reference.com. Retrieved 2007-06-18.
  3. "Blood Donation Information". UK National Blood Service. Retrieved 2007-06-18.

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