Material
and Methods
In a quality improvement project of two parts, the
rate of blood transfusion and the drop of hemoglobulin following primary total
hip replacement among four surgeons were conducted in two parts. The study
focussed on the confounding factors affecting the haemoglobin drop and the rate
of blood transfusion following primary total hip replacement. The first part of
the project was investigating what the blood loss was, investigated it,
introduced some changes, and reassessed the findings after the introduction of
the changes. We calculated the number of primary total hip replacement and the
rate of blood transfusion between October 2021 to February 2023, 355 total hips
replacements conducted, in the department; among these patients only
twenty-five patients received postoperative blood transfusion (7%). To investigate this further, one hundred
patients who did not receive blood transfusion were consecutively chosen
between 2021 and 2022: 25 patients from each surgeon. The surgical approaches
used were, anterior, modified Harding approach and the remaining two surgeon
were using posterior approach. The following patients were excluded from the
study; patients who underwent bilateral THR and revision hip replacement.
The following areas were studied in those patients who
received blood transfusion. The
estimated blood loss calculated in the operating theatre, from the cell saver
(when used), the weight of the swab, the input and output of fluid, the
suckers. Preoperative and first
postoperative haemoglobin check. Postoperative haemoglobin check was performed
using portable hemoglobinometer in the recovery of theatre and evaluated later
first postoperative day and later on. The intraoperative and local
administration of Tranexamic acid. The type of the total hip replacement
(cementless, hybrid and cemented total hip replacements), the approach, The ASA
grade and the BMI, A record of preoperative use of anticoagulant and
anti-platelet, and the record of any existing cardiac diseases. The findings
were discussed in the governance meetings and some plans were introduced
following data collection and interpretation to reduce blood loss. In the second part of the study, which was
conducted between Aug 23 and June 2024, 248 patients underwent primary total
hip replacement, eight patients among which received blood transfusion (3.2%)
in the postoperative period. All the confounding factors affecting the rate of
blood loss was again studied. To
study this further and correlate the blood loss to the four surgeons with
similar number of patients for each surgeon, 100 consecutive patients during
the same period was collated to investigate the confounding factors related to
blood transfusion, none of these patients received blood transfusion, the total
blood loss, the mean HB drop was collated. The
medical electronic records of all patients were studied using the computerised
patient records and the records from blood transfusion unit. The data was
collated.