Patients undergoing surgery are at risk of haemorrhagic complications. In these cases, immediate blood transfusions are often required. However, according to current guidelines, increasing evidence supports use of PBM, a patient-centred, systemic and evidence-based approach to managing a patient’s own blood. Under these guidelines, autologous blood transfusion may be more effective than transfusion of allogeneic blood from a donor.1
One method of autotransfusion is the use of a cell saver machine (otherwise known as the intraoperative cell savage machine or autologous blood salvage system), commonly called the “cell saver”, to suction, wash and filter blood for parenteral administration. Cell salvage is an important tool in PBM, and is widely used in orthopaedic-, trauma-, cardiac-, vascular and transplant surgery,2 in cases of severe bleeding where cell salvage adds significant value for blood supply.