Search
"We developed an electro-mechanical device with accessories (tubing and valve assembly) to perform a complete DVET" Chatterjee et al (2023).

Umbilical exchange transfusions

Abstract:

Manually performed double-volume exchange transfusion (DVET) is tedious, error-prone, and may incur the risk of embolism. We aimed to develop a device that automates the DVET procedure performed through the umbilical venous route. We evaluated changes in blood passing through the device during DVET. We developed an electro-mechanical device with accessories (tubing and valve assembly) to perform a complete DVET. It comprises two syringes driven by a common pump that moves back and forth to withdraw aliquots of the patient’s blood and infuse equal volumes of donor blood. In tandem, it draws donor blood from a blood bank bag and pushes the patient blood drawn from the previous cycle into a waste bag, respectively. One-way duckbill valves and a two-way pinch valve ensure the separation of the donor and patient blood. A sensor detects bubbles and clots. A dashboard displays set and measured parameters. We tested the accuracy of the delivered flow rate and volume, electrical safety, embolus detection, and changes in hematological and biochemical values. The delivered flow and volume were within 5% of the set parameters. All electrical safety parameters were within normal limits. The sensor consistently detected microbubbles and clots. There were no clinically significant differences in laboratory parameters between samples drawn directly from the blood bank bag and drawn from the exit port at 80, 100, 120, and 160 s with a fixed aliquot volume.


Reference:

Chatterjee A, Verma S, Dutta S, Singh S, Singh G, Sharma RR, Sachdev S, Attri S, Bhatia P. Novel device for automating exchange transfusions through umbilical venous route in neonates. Eur J Pediatr. 2023 Jan 10. doi: 10.1007/s00431-022-04791-3. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 36625935.