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Top / Sat, 29 Jun 2024 The Hindu

Uptick in dengue cases pushes up demand for platelets in Bengaluru

Following an uptick in the number of dengue cases in Bengaluru, blood banks are seeing an increase in demand for platelets in Bengaluru. Most blood banks in Bengaluru are facing a demand of at least 30 random donor platelet (RDP) units a day, as against an average of around 20 a day otherwise. Ravi Kumar, Director of Red Cross Blood Bank Sub-Committee, said the demand for SDP is high in Red Cross Society’s blood banks. “The demand for platelets has gone up by nearly 30% in our Blood Centre,” he said. Abdul Rehman Shariff, Managing Trustee of Jeevaraksha Blood Centre, said the demand for platelets has gone up considerably in the last two weeks.

Following an uptick in the number of dengue cases in Bengaluru, blood banks are seeing an increase in demand for platelets in Bengaluru. Although there is no shortage of this vital blood transfusion component as of now, the demand has gone up, said all the banks The Hindu spoke to.

Most blood banks in Bengaluru are facing a demand of at least 30 random donor platelet (RDP) units a day, as against an average of around 20 a day otherwise. The requirement of single donor platelet (SDP) units — required for critical patients — has also gone up from two or three to seven or eight per day.

T.N. Ravi Kumar, Director of Red Cross Blood Bank Sub-Committee, said the demand for SDP is high in Red Cross Society’s blood banks. “It has gone up from 30 a day till last month to over 45 now, a majority of which is for dengue patients. While we are able to meet the demand for RDP as we have fresh frozen plasma stock collected through organised blood donation camps, for SDP, we need to draw as and when there is a requirement,” he said.

“As platelets have a maximum shelf life of five days, laboratories usually process the blood only when required. But, in the current situation, labs are processing blood as and when it is collected to reduce the wait time. Platelets have to be processed within six hours of drawing blood,” he said.

Resumed donations

Narasimhaswamy L., Medical Officer at Rotary Bangalore TTK Blood Centre, said although the demand for platelets has increased, there is no shortage of the vital blood transfusion component now as voluntary donations through camps that were not happening in the last three months (due to elections and summer vacation) have resumed. “The demand for platelets has gone up by nearly 30% in our Blood Centre,” he said.

Other blood banks are also facing a similar situation. Abdul Rehman Shariff, Managing Trustee of Jeevaraksha Blood Centre, said the demand for platelets has gone up considerably in the last two weeks. Manoj Kumar, Managing Trustee of Lions Blood Bank at Vijayanagar, said despite the rise in demand, the situation is manageable as of now.

Not needed in all cases

Shivram C., Consultant in Transfusion Medicine at Manipal Hospitals (Old Airport Road), who has noted a 25% increase in platelet use in the last two weeks, said as per guidelines, platelet transfusion is required only when the patient’s count goes below 10,000 per microlitre, or if the patient has bleeding through the mucous membranes such as mouth, nose and through urine and motion.

“Compared to the situation ten years ago, doctors are judicious in the use of platelets now. There is no need to panic, as a patient can recover without transfusion even if the count drops up to 10,000 with proper management and monitoring in the hospital,” he asserted.

Hydration is key

Asserting that both RDP and SDP are the same qualitatively, Dr Shivram said, “What is most important for dengue patients is adequate hydration rather than getting worried about a drop in platelet count.”

“While whole blood donors are difficult to get, there are a lot of people coming forward to donate platelets. A healthy person whose platelet count is 1.5 lakh and above can donate the blood component twice a month and up to 24 times a year. Whatever is donated is made up in 48 hours,” the doctor explained.

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