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Hematology System Study Guide

DIC, HIT, HELLP, transfusion reactions (TRALI/TACO), hemorrhagic shock classification, neutropenic precautions, and oncologic emergencies (TLS, leukostasis).

Contents

  1. Anemia & Blood Disorders
  2. Coagulopathies Overview
  3. Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT)
  4. Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
  5. HELLP Syndrome
  6. TRALI vs TACO
  7. Hemorrhagic Shock Classification
  8. Transfusion Therapy & Reactions
  9. White Blood Cell Disorders
  10. Oncologic Emergencies

Anemia & Blood Disorders

Understanding Anemia

Hypoproliferative Anemia (Decreased Production)

Hemolytic Anemia (Increased Destruction)

Anemia Diagnostics & Treatment

Coagulopathies Overview

Platelet Function & Disorders

Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)

Coagulation Testing

ITP vs HIT Clinical Distinction

Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT)

HIT Pathophysiology

Clinical Presentation & Timing

4T Scoring System

Diagnostic Testing

HIT Management Protocol

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Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

DIC Pathophysiology

Laboratory Findings

Clinical Manifestations

DIC Management Strategy

HELLP Syndrome

Understanding HELLP

Clinical Presentation

Diagnostic Criteria

Management Priorities

Complications & Monitoring

TRALI vs TACO

Overview of Transfusion Pulmonary Complications

TRALI (Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury)

TACO (Transfusion-Associated Circulatory Overload)

Key Differentiating Features

Management Strategies

Prevention Approaches

Hemorrhagic Shock Classification

Understanding Hemorrhagic Shock

Class I Hemorrhage (<15% Blood Loss)

Class II Hemorrhage (15-30% Blood Loss)

Class III Hemorrhage (30-40% Blood Loss)

Class IV Hemorrhage (>40% Blood Loss)

Massive Transfusion Protocol

Transfusion Therapy & Reactions

Blood Product Indications

Transfusion Reaction Types

Acute Hemolytic Reaction

Metabolic Complications

Transfusion Safety Protocol

White Blood Cell Disorders

Leukocyte Overview

Neutrophils & Neutropenia

Neutropenic Precautions

Febrile Neutropenia Management

Lymphocytes & Lymphoproliferative Disorders

Oncologic Emergencies

Tumor Lysis Syndrome (TLS)

TLS Metabolic Abnormalities

TLS Prevention & Monitoring

TLS Treatment

Leukemia Overview for Critical Care

See a Hematology question you can’t answer?

Here are 3 questions from our premium bank. The full rationale explains exactly why the right answer is right — and why the 3 distractors trap most test-takers.

Premium Practice Question

A 64-year-old receiving PRBCs for GI bleed develops acute dyspnea and hypoxemia 45 minutes into the transfusion. VS: T 101.6°F, BP 82/44, HR 128. CXR shows bilateral infiltrates. BNP is 90. What is the most likely diagnosis?

  1. TACO
  2. TRALI
  3. Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction
  4. Febrile non-hemolytic reaction
Rationale: TRALI occurs within 6 hours, presents like ARDS with hypotension + fever and BNP not elevated. TACO typically has hypertension and elevated BNP....
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Premium Practice Question

A patient becomes acutely short of breath and hypoxic during a PRBC transfusion; you note new wheezing and a sudden change in vital signs. What is the first nursing action?

  1. Administer IV furosemide
  2. Stop the transfusion and keep the IV line open with normal saline
  3. Slow the transfusion rate and reassess in 15 minutes
  4. Draw a troponin level
Rationale: Any suspected transfusion reaction requires stop transfusion immediately. Further actions (diuretics, airway support, labs, blood bank notification) follow....
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Premium Practice Question

A patient started on heparin for NSTEMI 7 days ago now has platelets drop from 260k to 120k and develops a new painful, swollen calf. Which action is most appropriate?

  1. Continue heparin; platelets are still >50k
  2. Stop heparin and start a non-heparin anticoagulant (e.g., argatroban)
  3. Transfuse platelets immediately
  4. Start warfarin as the only anticoagulant right away
Rationale: Timing (day 5–10) + platelet drop ≥50% + new clot = HIT → stop heparin and anticoagulate with a non-heparin agent. Platelet transfusion can worsen thrombosis unless life-threatening bleeding....
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