The pilot project at Toronto’s Peter Munk Cardiac Centre will soon be expanded to a dozen other Canadian hospitals – part of a movement to stem a looming shortage of blood products
Please enable JavaScript to view this content. Open this photo in gallery: Dr. Vivek Rao, Chief, Division of Cardiovascular Surgery with the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, prepares an aortic valve replacement during open heart surgery on a sixty nine year old Michael Joseph Towns on April 10 2014. The patient was having an aortic valve replaced during the 3 + hour operation. Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail
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Open this photo in gallery: Surgeons pack Mr. Towns’s heart with two sponges after his heart is restarted and he is taken off the heart-lung machine. Surgeons then wait five minutes in order to measure just how much he is bleeding. Fred Lum
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Open this photo in gallery: The two sponges are placed on a scale after the five minutes elapses. They weighed 83 grams, which is greater than the cutoff that indicates a patient could bleed more than expected. The surgeons wait a few more minutes and Mr. Towns stops bleeding on his own. No transfusion is required. Fred Lum
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Open this photo in gallery: Toward the end of surgery, a sample blood is taken to a lab to determine how quickly clotting will begin. In the case of Mr. Towns, it was determined that he would probably not require a transfusion of any kind. Fred Lum
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