Submitted:
15 July 2024
Posted:
17 July 2024
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Abstract
Keywords:
Sections
- The plausibility of a shortage of blood
- How the shortage of blood comes about
- The distribution of the remaining blood
- Stagnation of recovery
- Proposed treatment
The Plausibility of a Shortage of Blood
- Occasional extreme pallor:
- Occasional blue nail beds:
- Fatigue and slow recovery after minimal exertion of muscles and brain (Post-exertional malaise, PEM):
- Strongly increased pulse rate when standing (Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, POTS):
- A heavy feeling in the arms and legs:
- Hypersensitivity to light and sound:
- Pain throughout the entire body:
- Periods of not being able to move at all:
- Reduced tolerance to heat:
- Dyspnea:
How the Shortage of Blood Comes About
The Distribution of the Remaining Blood
- the muscles necessary for breathing: the intercostal muscles and the muscles of the diaphragm
- the brainstem, spinal cord, and nerves that control the muscle groups mentioned above.
- and of course the arterial blood supply to the heart muscle, which already regulates this itself.
- Stagnation of Recovery
Proposed Treatment
- anti-inflammatory pain-relieving medications, which are prostaglandin inhibitors, such as aspirin, ibuprofen, diclofenac and even paracetamol
- proton pump inhibiting antacids (replace if necessary by gastric acid-binding compounds).
- The infusion must not be prepared with, at least the patient is not left with, a saline infusion because the colloid osmotic pressure of the blood may be critically low.
- The infusion must be administered very slowly and with small amounts per day to allow the osmotic pressure to adjust and because the potentially stiff blood vessels cannot adapt quickly. The entire vascular system needs time to adapt. If it goes too fast, the blood circulation in the lungs will be overloaded.
- There must be continuous supervision by a qualified physician or nurse to stop the infusion if the patient becomes short of breath. If that is the case, we can try again the next day, possibly with a lower infusion rate.
- Dose of albumin concentrate per session: equivalent to 100 mL of plasma as in a vial of 100 mL with an albumin concentrate of 40 g/L.
- Infusion rate: 1 mL per minute.
References
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