Vallet Benoit, Adamczyk Sébastien, Barreau Olivier, Lebuffe Gilles
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital of Lille, France.
Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol. 2007 Jun;21(2):173-81. doi: 10.1016/j.bpa.2007.02.003.
In clinical practice, the decision to transfuse is linked to the hope of increasing oxygen transport (TO2) to tissues. Physiologic transfusion triggers should progressively replace arbitrary hemoglobin-based transfusion triggers. These 'physiologic' transfusion triggers can be based on signs and symptoms of impaired global oxygenation (lactate, venous O2 saturation [SvO2]) or, even better, of regional tissue oxygenation (electrocardiographic ST-segment, electroencephalographic P300 latency). The SvO2 or its surrogate, the central venous 02 saturation (ScvO2), is a clinical tool which integrates the relationship between whole-body O2 uptake and TO2, and as such can be proposed as a simple physiologic transfusion trigger.