Measurement of Blood Volume with a New Apparatus
- 27 April 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 264 (17), 842-848
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm196104272641702
Abstract
THE prevailing methods for measuring blood volume have failed to find widespread clinical application. This is because the technics are cumbersome, and because accurate, repeated measurements cannot be made with sufficient frequency to be of value in the management of persisting derangements of blood volume. The need for an accurate, freely repetitive and, if possible, semiautomatic method is obvious. Appraisals of blood volume during major surgical procedures, after extensive burns and during therapy for cardiac decompensation, acute renal failure and other major disorders as a rule are based upon data that at best allow only rough approximations. These are often . . .Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- A Consideration of Indications for Preoperative Transfusions Based on Analysis of Blood Volumes and Circulating Proteins in Normal and Malnourished Patient With and Without CancerAnnals of Surgery, 1960
- CLINICAL STUDIES OF THE BLOOD VOLUME. VIII. MACROCYTIC AND HYPOCHROMIC ANEMIAS DUE TO CHRONIC BLOOD LOSS, HEMOLYSIS AND MISCELLANEOUS CAUSES, AND POLYCYTHEMIA VERA 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1939