Estimating blood loss

Why it matters (in theatre and recovery)

  • Underestimating blood loss delays resuscitation and transfusion; overestimating can lead to unnecessary fluids/blood and complications.
  • Blood loss estimation is part of a bigger picture: patient physiology, surgical field, suction/drains, swabs, and lab results.
  • Trend matters more than a single number: repeated estimates + observations help you spot ongoing bleeding early.

Core concepts and definitions

  • Estimated Blood Loss (EBL): a best estimate from suction, swabs, drapes, and the surgical field (often imprecise).
  • Measured Blood Loss (MBL): what you can actually measure (e.g., suction volume minus irrigation; weighed swabs).
  • Hidden blood loss: blood in tissues/cavities or on the floor/drapes; can be significant in major surgery/trauma.
  • Haemodilution: Hb may look “okay” early if bleeding is acute and fluids are given; interpret Hb in context and repeat if concerned.

Step-by-step approach in theatre (simple and repeatable)

  • Start with a baseline: note pre-op Hb, weight, comorbidities, anticoagulants/antiplatelets, and expected surgical blood loss.
  • Suction: record total in canister and subtract irrigation/flushes (ask the scrub team what has been used).
  • Swabs: estimate by counting and (if available) weighing; if not weighed, use a consistent local rule of thumb and document it.
  • Drapes/floor/gowns: acknowledge “unmeasured loss” if significant; do not ignore it when the patient is unstable.
  • Drains: note output and whether it is fresh blood vs serosanguinous; sudden increases are important.
  • Reassess frequently: update EBL at key points (after incision, after major dissection, at closure, on arrival to recovery).

Practical rules of thumb (use with caution and consistency)

  • Suction canister: 1 mL volume ≈ 1 mL blood, but only after subtracting irrigation accurately.
  • Weighing swabs: 1 g increase in weight ≈ 1 mL blood (because blood density is close to 1 g/mL).
  • Visual estimation is unreliable: bright lighting, dilution with saline, and soaked drapes can mislead—prefer measured methods where possible.
  • If you must use visual cues, standardise: agree with the team what “half soaked” or “fully soaked” means locally, and document the method.

Linking blood loss to physiology (what to watch)

  • Early signs of significant loss: rising heart rate, falling blood pressure, narrowing pulse pressure, cool peripheries, reduced capillary refill.
  • Anaesthesia can mask signs: vasodilation, beta-blockers, neuraxial block, and controlled ventilation may blunt tachycardia/hypotension.
  • Look for end-organ clues: falling urine output, rising lactate/base deficit, increasing vasopressor requirement, worsening peripheral perfusion.
  • Check the surgical field: ask directly if bleeding is controlled and whether loss is ongoing or expected to worsen.

What to do with your estimate (actions and communication)

  • Communicate early: tell the surgeon and ODP/anaesthetic assistant your current EBL/MBL and whether it is ongoing.
  • Escalate appropriately: call for senior help early if bleeding is brisk, ongoing, or physiology is deteriorating.
  • Use EBL to guide planning: IV access, warming, blood availability, and whether to activate local major haemorrhage processes if needed.
  • Document clearly: include method (e.g., suction minus irrigation, swab weights), time points, and key interventions.

Common first-time scenarios

  • Tonsillectomy/ENT: small volumes can look dramatic; focus on suction minus irrigation and patient physiology, especially in children.
  • Obstetrics: postpartum haemorrhage can be rapid; blood mixes with amniotic fluid—use weighed swabs, suction minus irrigation, and clinical signs; escalate early.
  • Orthopaedics (hip/knee): hidden loss can be large; tourniquet release may cause sudden bleeding; expect Hb to fall later.
  • Laparoscopy: blood can pool out of sight; unexplained tachycardia/hypotension with low suction volumes should prompt concern for concealed bleeding.
How do I calculate blood in the suction canister?

• Blood in suction (mL) ≈ total suction volume − irrigation/flush volume • Ask the scrub team for irrigation used; include any saline used to clear the field • If uncertain, state the assumption and treat the estimate cautiously

How do swab weights translate to blood volume?

• 1 g increase in swab weight ≈ 1 mL blood • Use dry swab weight (or standard pack weight) as baseline • Ensure swabs aren’t heavily soaked with saline (or you will overestimate blood loss)

Why is visual estimation often wrong?

• Blood spreads thinly and looks like “more” on drapes • Saline dilution makes volumes look larger • Lighting and colour changes (arterial vs venous, clots) mislead • People tend to underestimate large losses and overestimate small losses

Can I rely on haemoglobin during acute bleeding?

• Not initially—Hb may remain near baseline early on • Hb falls after redistribution and fluid resuscitation • Use trends + physiology; repeat labs if bleeding continues or the patient is unstable

What should make me worry that blood loss is worse than it looks?

• Increasing vasopressor requirement • Tachycardia (if not beta-blocked), hypotension, cool peripheries • Low urine output, rising lactate/base deficit • Surgical concern, difficult haemostasis, or blood pooling out of view

What do I say when updating the team?

• “Current estimated blood loss is ~X mL: suction Y minus irrigation Z, plus swabs (weighed/estimated). Loss is (ongoing/controlled). Physiology is (stable/unstable). Plan: (fluids/blood requested/senior help/major haemorrhage pathway).”

When should I send blood tests?

• If bleeding is more than expected, ongoing, or physiology changes • Consider: FBC (Hb/platelets), coagulation screen, fibrinogen, blood gas with lactate • Repeat based on rate of bleeding and response to treatment

How do I avoid double-counting blood loss?

• Decide who is counting what (suction vs swabs) and update a single running total • Don’t add swab blood if it has been wrung into suction (or vice versa) • Record time points so totals are not accidentally re-added

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