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Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation

In veterinary medicine, blood transfusion is commonly performed on companion animals. The common marmoset is a small nonhuman primate with increasing popularity as an animal model in biomedical research. Because of its small whole blood volume, the marmoset is at high risk of exsanguination, and blo...

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Autores principales: Yurimoto, Terumi, Mineshige, Takayuki, Shinohara, Haruka, Inoue, Takashi, Sasaki, Erika
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9130032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34789617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1538/expanim.21-0134
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author Yurimoto, Terumi
Mineshige, Takayuki
Shinohara, Haruka
Inoue, Takashi
Sasaki, Erika
author_facet Yurimoto, Terumi
Mineshige, Takayuki
Shinohara, Haruka
Inoue, Takashi
Sasaki, Erika
author_sort Yurimoto, Terumi
collection PubMed
description In veterinary medicine, blood transfusion is commonly performed on companion animals. The common marmoset is a small nonhuman primate with increasing popularity as an animal model in biomedical research. Because of its small whole blood volume, the marmoset is at high risk of exsanguination, and blood transfusion is required to care for life-threatening bleeding. However, few clinical evaluations exist on transfusions for marmosets. This study performed whole blood transfusion with cross-matching on nine marmosets and surveyed the therapeutic effects. Recipients included clinical cases with persistent bleeding, anemia, and coma, as well as animals subjected to postoperative bleeding prophylaxis. Donors were selected from healthy marmosets, including littermates. Cross-match assay before transfusion were all negative, and recipients showed no visible signs of transfusion-related adverse reactions. Whole blood transfusions caused hemostasis and successful recovery in bleeding marmosets, including long-term improvement of anemia cases. Our results indicated that blood transfusion is effective for marmosets with severe anemia and persistent hemorrhage from both non-experimental and surgical causes. Furthermore, DNA sequencing for blood-group classification revealed that all subject marmosets were type A, suggesting that the risk of blood type mismatch may be low in this species.
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spelling pubmed-91300322022-06-09 Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation Yurimoto, Terumi Mineshige, Takayuki Shinohara, Haruka Inoue, Takashi Sasaki, Erika Exp Anim Original In veterinary medicine, blood transfusion is commonly performed on companion animals. The common marmoset is a small nonhuman primate with increasing popularity as an animal model in biomedical research. Because of its small whole blood volume, the marmoset is at high risk of exsanguination, and blood transfusion is required to care for life-threatening bleeding. However, few clinical evaluations exist on transfusions for marmosets. This study performed whole blood transfusion with cross-matching on nine marmosets and surveyed the therapeutic effects. Recipients included clinical cases with persistent bleeding, anemia, and coma, as well as animals subjected to postoperative bleeding prophylaxis. Donors were selected from healthy marmosets, including littermates. Cross-match assay before transfusion were all negative, and recipients showed no visible signs of transfusion-related adverse reactions. Whole blood transfusions caused hemostasis and successful recovery in bleeding marmosets, including long-term improvement of anemia cases. Our results indicated that blood transfusion is effective for marmosets with severe anemia and persistent hemorrhage from both non-experimental and surgical causes. Furthermore, DNA sequencing for blood-group classification revealed that all subject marmosets were type A, suggesting that the risk of blood type mismatch may be low in this species. Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science 2021-11-18 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC9130032/ /pubmed/34789617 http://dx.doi.org/10.1538/expanim.21-0134 Text en ©2022 Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) License. (CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
spellingShingle Original
Yurimoto, Terumi
Mineshige, Takayuki
Shinohara, Haruka
Inoue, Takashi
Sasaki, Erika
Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
title Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
title_full Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
title_fullStr Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
title_short Whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
title_sort whole blood transfusion in common marmosets: a clinical evaluation
topic Original
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9130032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34789617
http://dx.doi.org/10.1538/expanim.21-0134
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