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British Journal of Anaesthesia, Vol 82, Issue 1 110-111, Copyright © 1999 by The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Effect of 20% in vitro haemodilution with warmed buffered salt solution and cerebrospinal fluid on coagulation

T. G. Ruttmann, M. F. James and K. F. Wells
Department of Anaesthesia, University of Cape Town Medical School, Observatory, Cape 7925, South Africa

We have conducted an in vitro coagulation study consisting of two separate groups of 20 subjects using the thrombelastograph. In the first group, haemodilution was performed with a physiological balanced salt solution similar to plasma, with the exception of calcium, and buffered to a normal pH (Plasmalyte B) at 37 degrees C on blood obtained from consenting volunteers. In the second group, a protein- poor body fluid (cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)) obtained from parturient patients undergoing spinal anaesthesia for Caesarean section was used as the diluent. There were statistically significant differences between the warmed Plasmalyte B treated samples and their untreated controls for all variables measured by the thrombelastograph, except for maximum amplitude, and between the CSF treated samples and their untreated controls for all variables. We conclude that electrolyte and acid-base composition of the diluent fluid had no effect on the observation that crystalloid haemodilution produces hypercoagulability. The marked increase in coagulability produced by addition of CSF cannot be explained on a simple haemodilution basis and confirms previous suggestions of the presence of a procoagulant factor in CSF.
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