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  • Autologous Blood Donation

    Hi everyone,

    I've had 2 blood donations and I have 1 more to go (they're all a week apart). My hemoglobin was 15.3 g/mL the first week, and 12.3 g/mL the second week which I thought was kind of scary. The second donation did not go well. I had bruising from the first week and it took many tries for about 4 people to finally get the vein and I even have good veins! I could barely move my arm the rest of the day because it hurt so badly and was swollen. It's better now but I have a really nasty bruise. I've been feeling light headed and low energy. I've been trying to drink more and eat more iron rich foods but it doesn't seem to be helping. If I feel this lousy now, how am I going to feel after the third donation on Monday? I can't take iron supplements so that could be why this isn't going so well. If I give another pint of blood and am therefore more weak, how will I recover well from the surgery? Thanks for any input.

    Shell
    Chemist, 30

    1998- 18 degrees
    2003- 33 degrees
    2005- 37 degrees
    2006- 44 degrees
    May 2007- 47 degrees
    December 2007 - 50 degrees X-ray

    Surgery May 27, 2008
    Fused T1 to L2
    Curve corrected to 15 degrees X-ray

  • #2
    Shell-- I'd suggest telling your surgeon how it's going. It could be that he'd say it's no big deal and just be happy with what you've already been able to give. Then again, he might not. That said, I also will tell you I was able to do it and was still feeling ok for the surgery. Maybe not quite as strong as usual, but ok. I actually gave 4 units in 3 weeks, although I failed the hematocrit the 4th time and had to delay by a couple more days, so it was exactly the one-week deadline for my surgery. (You can't give within a week of your surgery.)

    Why is it that you can't take iron? Are you drinking OJ when you eat your iron-rich foods? It helps with iron absorption. There are some brands of blackstrap molasses that can boost your levels also, if you can tolerate that. Molasses is by the pancake syrup in the grocery store. I ended up (the Red Cross nurses suggested it) taking 2 tablespoons of it every night, followed by an orange juice chaser. Ewwwwww! But I survived! Anyway, at least one kind of blackstrap molasses has 70% of your PDV (percent daily value) of iron. Normal molasses just has 4%... so look at the labels. They ended up using all 4 units of blood--3 during the surgery, even with using the cell saver blood, and then 1 unit when I was in intensive care.

    Good luck!!! I'm thinking of you!
    71 and plugging along... but having some problems
    2007 52° w/ severe lumbar stenosis & L2L3 lateral listhesis (side shift)
    5/4/07 posterior fusion T2-L4 w/ laminectomies and osteotomies @L2L3, L3L4
    Dr. Kim Hammerberg, Rush Univ. Medical Center in Chicago

    Corrected to 15°
    CMT (type 2) DX in 2014, progressing
    10/2018 x-rays - spondylolisthesis at L4/L5 - Dr. DeWald is monitoring

    Click to view my pics: pics of scoli x-rays digital x-rays, and pics of me

    Comment


    • #3
      Just a thought but do you have any family that might be willing to try and donate for you? You don't want to be feeling under the weather before your surgery even happens, and if donating is causing problems with your hemoglobin then maybe you should consider it. I am only supposed to donate 2 units, but my mom is going to try and donate one for me so that i only have to do one. I have donated blood before and i know i get really light-headed for a few days... i hope that you can figure something out, if not, call your surgeon--- he might have a better suggestion. Good luck!
      aBbiE
      22 yr old F,KU college student
      Kyphoscoliosis...
      Scoliosis (25T, 23L) diagnosed @ 14 yrs old; curves June 08 were 45T, 32L with 18 degree rotation
      Kyphosis of 65 degrees...
      I am missing a lumbar vertebrae

      Surgery 6/30/2008 with Dr. Lawrence Lenke
      Fused T2-L2


      before/after pics
      all smiles!

      Comment


      • #4
        My blood donations took so much out of me I refused to donate for a third time and simply told the surgeon's nurse I was done. They had donor blood on hand for me but as it turns out I only needed the two pints I donated. You don't HAVE to donate if you don't feel up to it.
        Chris
        A/P fusion on June 19, 2007 at age 52; T10-L5
        Pre-op thoracolumbar curve: 70 degrees
        Post-op curve: 12 degrees
        Dr. Boachie-adjei, HSS, New York

        Comment


        • #5
          You're scheduled for surgery on May 27th??

          Originally posted by briarrose
          ... If I feel this lousy now, how am I going to feel after the third donation on Monday?
          Shell, I'm with Susie*Bee (talk to your surgeon) and Singer (just say NO!).

          Monday (the 19th) is actually beyond the range of generally accepted safe pre-op autologous donations: The rule of thumb is no more than 30 days prior, no less than 10 days prior. Personally, I'd say a THIRD donation Monday is too close - especially in light of your dropping hemoglobin.

          Whomever posted about having family/friends donate for you ... yeah, you could. *However*, I don't understand why so many are against blood bank supplies. There is nothing wrong with either banked blood OR cell saver, and there's a good chance you won't need *any* blood transfused - much less 3 pints!

          (I banked a pint of my own, and it wasn't necessary during surgery. We only used it a few days afterwards because my counts were a TAD low, and it irritated me that it might go to waste. :-)

          At this point, you really need to focus on building yourself UP. You already have 2 pints in stock, and if it were me, I'd call it a day.

          You're going to need your energy afterwards to heal, hon ... and going in with your levels skewed is going to hurt you in the long run.

          Good luck to you, Shell. I know it's scary, but you're going to be fine.

          Regards,
          Pam
          Fusion is NOT the end of the world.
          AIDS Walk Houston 2008 5K @ 33 days post op!


          41, dx'd JIS & Boston braced @ 10
          Pre-op ±53°, Post-op < 20°
          Fused 2/5/08, T4-L1 ... Darrell S. Hanson, Houston


          VIEW MY X-RAYS
          EMAIL ME

          Comment


          • #6
            Steak every night!

            Shell-- the other thing is to be sure to eat well to boost that iron back up, regardless of what your surgeon says about donating. Your hemoglobin (or hematocrit--whichever way they test) will always go down as you give more blood, which is why it dropped for your 2nd time--but it can't drop below a certain level or you can't donate. That's why they make all but autologous donors wait two months between donations. Anyway, even if you don't donate any more blood, you should still work to build up your iron again, so eat plenty of red meat and other foods high in iron... You'll do fine. It's almost time! Try to enjoy your time till the big day-- don't get stressed over the blood donations.
            71 and plugging along... but having some problems
            2007 52° w/ severe lumbar stenosis & L2L3 lateral listhesis (side shift)
            5/4/07 posterior fusion T2-L4 w/ laminectomies and osteotomies @L2L3, L3L4
            Dr. Kim Hammerberg, Rush Univ. Medical Center in Chicago

            Corrected to 15°
            CMT (type 2) DX in 2014, progressing
            10/2018 x-rays - spondylolisthesis at L4/L5 - Dr. DeWald is monitoring

            Click to view my pics: pics of scoli x-rays digital x-rays, and pics of me

            Comment


            • #7
              As far as food ...

              Green, leafy veggies - the darker the better ... and organ meats. (yes, I realize some are barfing at the thought, but I LOVE liver!)

              I still say too close to surgery to spurt another pint, but that's just me.

              And continue to drink lots of water (a gallon a day spread out over a day is reasonable) whether you donate again or not. You need it to replace what you've lost.
              Fusion is NOT the end of the world.
              AIDS Walk Houston 2008 5K @ 33 days post op!


              41, dx'd JIS & Boston braced @ 10
              Pre-op ±53°, Post-op < 20°
              Fused 2/5/08, T4-L1 ... Darrell S. Hanson, Houston


              VIEW MY X-RAYS
              EMAIL ME

              Comment


              • #8
                loves to skate

                Hi Shell,
                I never was able to donate blood for my surgery as I developed a nasty cold 5 weeks before the surgery date. I got well just in time for the surgery. I required 8 pints between the two surgeries. Two were from the cell saver from the posterior surgery, then three pints a day after. I had three pints after the anterior surgery. I have worked in blood banks for years and because of all the testing and questions on the questionaire for homologous donors, I was not at all afraid of receiving bank blood. A 15.3 hemaglobin dropping to a 12.3 is a big drop. Are you a small person? I would forget about donating any more blood if I were you. You would probably be rejected anyway. Most women are fortunate if they are able to give 2 pints.
                Follow the advice about the black strap molasses and OJ if you can tolerate it and eat plenty of red meat. The iron in red meat is most easily absorbed.
                We will be thinking of you. Sally
                Diagnosed with severe lumbar scoliosis at age 65.
                Posterior Fusion L2-S1 on 12/4/2007. age 67
                Anterior Fusion L3-L4,L4-L5,L5-S1 on 12/19/2007
                Additional bone removed to decompress right side of L3-L4 & L4-L5 on 4/19/2010
                New England Baptist Hospital, Boston, MA
                Dr. Frank F. Rands735.photobucket.com/albums/ww360/butterflyfive/

                "In God We Trust" Happy moments, praise God. Difficult moments, seek God. Quiet moments, worship God. Painful moments, trust God. Every moment, thank God.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Hi

                  It's your body "Just Say No" if you fell you are too weak and as long as you trust the screened blood, (I do). I would rather gather myself and be strong for surgery, I doubt they would cancel over it. I think one surgeon told me I needed to give 3 also, personally I'd rather keep it and have some added if needed!
                  Good Luck!
                  Our Very Best To You,
                  Chris & Cathy

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Thank you all so much for your invaluable and fast responses. I'm going to call my surgeon tomorrow (I feel like I call every other day. I hope I don't annoy them!). I'm actually waiting on a call from him regarding my nickel allergy which is a whole other issue.

                    Susie - I'm going to try to find some molasses tomorrow. Thanks for the suggestion!

                    amae - Getting family members to donate is a good idea. Unfortunately, all of mine are too chicken except for my husband. I don't know my blood type so I don't know if that would work.

                    Singer - I think I'm going to do the same thing you did, refuse! Thanks!

                    Pam - Thanks again for your support. I cannot eat liver! I tried twice and it's just too gross for me. I completely lost my appetite after my donation last week which is weird for me. I'm always up for eating. I'm forcing myself to eat 3 meals a day. I bought some spinach today and ate chili for dinner.

                    Loves to skate - Thanks for your input. If my surgeon insists that I give another pint (I doubt he will), I'm going to hope I get rejected. I'm an average sized person (5'3" 130lbs) who rarely eats meat. I was surprised I was able to give at all so like you said, I should be happy with 2.

                    Chris and Cathy - I'd prefer to keep the third pint as well. My surgeon originally said 2 pints, but since my surgery was postponed a week, he said why not another. He should be pretty understanding about it.

                    Thanks again everyone!!!!

                    Shell
                    Chemist, 30

                    1998- 18 degrees
                    2003- 33 degrees
                    2005- 37 degrees
                    2006- 44 degrees
                    May 2007- 47 degrees
                    December 2007 - 50 degrees X-ray

                    Surgery May 27, 2008
                    Fused T1 to L2
                    Curve corrected to 15 degrees X-ray

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Shell,

                      One more vote to not worry about any more donations.

                      My surgeon told me I would need 4 units, which it turned out I did, in addition to cell saver blood. Being a very stubborn person, I was obsessed about donating 4 units. Turns out, because my veins are very small (even tho I am not), it was very difficult to get the needle in, and once it did get in, the blood stopped flowing soon after; the nurse kept trying other veins in both arms & both entire forearms got badly bruised each time. I went to the blood bank 6 or 7 times, was rejected a few of these because of low hemoglobin, did manage to give a 1/2 unit before the flow stopped (which they had to throw out b/c the bags are set up to hold a whole unit) and once actually gave an entire unit plus extra for specimen testing (it took over an hour for that much blood to flow!). Soon after, I was told my surgery date was being pushed back 3 weeks, which meant this 1 unit would have to be frozen.

                      Then I got a letter from the blood bank saying that my speciman tested positive for HEP-C, which I knew I didn't have. My PCP ordered more tests and, sure 'nuf, I tested negative for HEP-C. Also, I was told that Hospital for Special Surgery didn't care even if I were HEP-C positive, because it was going back into me. However, turns out HSS does not freeze blood; instead it gets sent to the New York Blood Bank, who decided that because the bag was (incorrectly) labelled "contaminated" they would not freeze it (despite my surgeon's nurse explaining to them that the specimen, not the bag, was what was contaminated. So they threw out my one & only unit!

                      What of waste of time & energy! I received 4 units of bank blood. A nurse at the local blood bank said she never had a female patient, and only once a male, who was able to give 4 units. She told me, "go home; better to have the blood in you than in a bag"
                      As of 12/25/07, age 62, 100* thoracic kyphosis, 73* L1-S1 lordosis, 37*/25* compensatory S-curve scoliosis. On 12/26/07, Dr. Boachie @ HSS NYC did 11 hours ant. & post. procedures, fused T2-L2, kyphosis now 57*, scoli 10*. Regained 2 1/4 inches in height!! Improving every day.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Good for you, Shell. It sounds like you have a good plan, and got some good advice from the group. Now, if only the surgeon goes along...

                        If you read this before you go shopping--all blackstrap molasses aren't created equal-- the first jar I got was just 20% PDV iron... and I thought the nurse had just remembered wrong. But when I was in another store I checked their brand, and it said 70%. I sort of took it like cough syrup--sticking the spoonfuls in my mouth quickly and trying to swallow immediately. Don't get me wrong-- I love molasses, but when it's baked in stuff. And blackstrap is really strong.

                        Janet--the nurses at the Red Cross blood center where I went also said hardly any men can do 4... most peter out at 2, maybe 3. And most women do 1 or 2 at the most. They said they didn't get why these surgeons are always requesting so much blood when it just doesn't happen. I tried so hard with everything I ate, cut way back on caffeine, etc. When I finished and got all 4 units, they called me "Wonder Woman"-- which really buoyed my spirits at the "1 week to go" time... I felt like at least I had succeeded with something! I'm sure it's my one and only claim to fame. Sorry you got such a raw deal with your valiant efforts.
                        71 and plugging along... but having some problems
                        2007 52° w/ severe lumbar stenosis & L2L3 lateral listhesis (side shift)
                        5/4/07 posterior fusion T2-L4 w/ laminectomies and osteotomies @L2L3, L3L4
                        Dr. Kim Hammerberg, Rush Univ. Medical Center in Chicago

                        Corrected to 15°
                        CMT (type 2) DX in 2014, progressing
                        10/2018 x-rays - spondylolisthesis at L4/L5 - Dr. DeWald is monitoring

                        Click to view my pics: pics of scoli x-rays digital x-rays, and pics of me

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Wow Janet, that sounded like quite the ordeal with your blood donation and for nothing! That must've been stressful for you.

                          Susie - I went to the store today but had no luck finding the right kind of molasses. I may go to a health food store tomorrow. My husband grew up with health fanatic parents so he had to eat black strap molasses all the time. He said it tastes like tar!

                          My surgeon just called me a few minutes ago. He said that I didn't even have to give the first 2 units if I didn't want to so I don't have to give a third. He said it sounds like I'm anemic at this point so I may end up needing more than 2 units during the surgery. He said if I feel up to it, I should give, but if not it's fine and I should go eat some hamburgers regardless. I love my surgeon. I wish all doctors were like him.

                          Thanks again for the advice everyone!
                          Chemist, 30

                          1998- 18 degrees
                          2003- 33 degrees
                          2005- 37 degrees
                          2006- 44 degrees
                          May 2007- 47 degrees
                          December 2007 - 50 degrees X-ray

                          Surgery May 27, 2008
                          Fused T1 to L2
                          Curve corrected to 15 degrees X-ray

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Shell

                            Sheena could only donate one unit which she received in the recovery room. We made a point of telling the doctor that we did not want her transfused with off the shelf blood unless it became critical and fortunately, she was able to get by with just her own unit. She came home anemic, 8.4 Hgb but at 6 months, she's back up to 12. She was pretty dizzy and weak for the first few weeks, but since she wasn't up to doing much anyways, it wasn't a big deal. I noticed she was pale for a few months but we gave her iron supplements and iron-rich food during that period. My point is that you can discuss this with your physician and make your wishes clear to him prior to surgery and you will eventually build your blood back up too.

                            Good luck!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              loves to skate

                              Hi Shell,
                              I should have said, I also drew blood donors when I worked in the blood bank and the people that donated the most for their surgery generally received more than those who only gave one or two pints, so don't even think about giving another pint. About that spinach, make sure you cook it because the iron isn't as absorbable in the raw form even though it probably tastes better raw for most people. Take good care, Sally
                              Diagnosed with severe lumbar scoliosis at age 65.
                              Posterior Fusion L2-S1 on 12/4/2007. age 67
                              Anterior Fusion L3-L4,L4-L5,L5-S1 on 12/19/2007
                              Additional bone removed to decompress right side of L3-L4 & L4-L5 on 4/19/2010
                              New England Baptist Hospital, Boston, MA
                              Dr. Frank F. Rands735.photobucket.com/albums/ww360/butterflyfive/

                              "In God We Trust" Happy moments, praise God. Difficult moments, seek God. Quiet moments, worship God. Painful moments, trust God. Every moment, thank God.

                              Comment

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