Discussion
Diagnosis With Brief Discussion
- Diagnosis
- Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury (TRALI)
- Radiologic Findings
- Chest radiograph on Jan. 20, 2006 shows the malignant mass in RUL and pleural effusion in right hemithorax. Chest radiograph on Jan. 23, 2006 within the first 8 hr after transfusion shows new opacities including bilateral ground glass opacities with a normal cardiac silhouette. Chest CT scan shows geographic ground glass opacities in both lungs with sparing previous constrictive bronchiolitis areas. A clinical diagnosis of a non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema was made, thus we excluded other causes such as sepsis, volume overload, cardiogenic pulmonary edema and drug-induced lung injury. On the basis of clinical signs and symptoms, the diagnosis of transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) was suggested.
The patient was given supportive management, with a high concentration of oxygen in combination with bronchodilators. Clinical improvement occurred 12 hours later and the chest film returned to normal within 6 days (see below).
- Brief Review
- Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is an underreported complication of transfusion therapy, and it is the third most common cause of transfusion-associated death. TRALI is defined as noncardiogenic pulmonary edema temporally related to transfusion therapy.
The pathogenesis of TRALI may be explained by a "two-hit" hypothesis, with the first "hit" being a predisposing inflammatory condition commonly present in the operating room or ICU. The second hit may involve the passive transfer of neutrophil or HLA antibodies from the donor or the transfusion of biologically active lipids from older, cellular blood products.
The diagnosis of TRALI relies on excluding other diagnoses such as sepsis, volume overload, and cardiogenic pulmonary edema. Supportive diagnostic evidence includes identifying neutrophil or human leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies in the donor or recipient plasma. All plasma-containing blood products have been implicated in TRALI, with the majority of cases linked to whole blood, packed RBCs, platelets, and fresh-frozen plasma.
Radiographic finding shows diffuse, fluffy infiltrates consistent with pulmonary edema, which may be patchy in the first few hours, with progression of the alveolar and interstitial infiltrates such that the entire lung is obscured. Resolution often occurs rapidly, even when initial hypoxemia is severe. Most patients can be extubated within 48 hours, and chest radiographs typically return to normal in 4 days, although hypoxemia and pulmonary infiltrates persist up to 7 days in a minority of patients.
The first step in the treatment of TRALI is to make the correct diagnosis. Treating TRALI like cardiogenic pulmonary edema or volume overload may lead to adverse outcomes. Treatment is supportive, with a prognosis substantially better than most causes of clinical acute lung injury.
- References
- 1. Looney MR, Gropper MA, Matthay MA. Transfusion-related acute lung injury. Chest 2004;126:249-258.
2. Tsalis K, Ganidou M, Blouhos K, Vasiliadis K, Betsis D. Transfusion-related acute lung injury: a life-threatening transfusion reaction. Med Sci Monit 2005;11:CS19-22
- Keywords
- Lung, Iatrogenic lung disease, Interstitial lung disease, ILD,