Subscriber Login   Users   Administrators
Online CE, compliance, and document control for clinical and histology laboratories

Sample Page

The page below is a sample from the MediaLab course, Hemolytic Disease of the Fetus and Newborn.

Learn about Compliance & CE courses available for clinical laboratories and individual medical technologists.

Factors That Affect Production of Anti-D

Exposure to D+ red cells: Anti-D is red cell immune. The usual route of exposure to the D antigen is during pregnancy. Fetal bleeds into the mother occur more commonly at delivery but some may occur antenatally due to small lesions in the placenta or due to placenta previa, amniocentesis, abdominal trauma, abortion, ectopic pregnancy, etc.

Transfusion is a relatively rare route of exposure since Rh-negative individuals normally receive only Rh-negative donor red cells. However, Rh-negative transfusion recipients may be exposed to small volumes of D-positive red cells in Rh-positive platelet concentrates. Also, there are rare reports of fresh frozen plasma, not normally matched for Rh(D), causing anti-D production.

Volume of fetal bleed: In general, the larger the fetal bleed, the more likely the mother is to produce anti-D. Approximately 1 pregnancy in 400 result in a fetomaternal hemorrhage (FMH) of 30 mL or greater.

ABO incompatibility between mother and fetus: If fetal red cells are ABO incompatible with the mother, maternal anti-A or anti-B will rapidly remove fetal cells from the circulation before anti-D can be produced. This protection decreases the chance of anti-D being produced but does not eliminate it entirely.

 

 

MediaLab, Inc.

http://www.MediaLabInc.net    |    (877) 776-8460 (tollfree)    |    sales@medialabinc.net