How often can you have a phlebotomy?

The frequency of phlebotomies may change from twice weekly, to weekly or monthly. Generally when a patient's serum ferritin is less than 500ng/mL, the frequency of phlebotomy can be slowed to once a month. Each person is different and responds to treatment in a unique way.
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How many times phlebotomy can be done?

Therapeutic phlebotomy is the optimal treatment for this disease, and hydroxychloroquine treatment is a good alternative. In these cases, phlebotomy should be repeated every 2 weeks until the Hb levels are <20 ng/mL.
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What are the side effects of phlebotomy?

Side Effects
  • Dizziness or lightheadedness.
  • Fainting.
  • Low blood pressure.
  • Soreness, redness, burning or pain where the needle was placed.
  • Bruising where needle was placed.
  • Nausea and vomiting.
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How much blood is taken during a phlebotomy?

Health professionals perform phlebotomy in a medical clinic. The process is similar to donating blood. A health professional inserts a needle into a vein in your arm and removes about 500 mL (17 fl oz) of blood. The procedure takes about 30 minutes.
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How often should phlebotomy be done with polycythemia?

How often will you get phlebotomy for polycythemia vera (PV)? You'll get this treatment once a week or month until your hematocrit goes down to around 45%. Hematocrit is the percentage of red blood cells compared with the total amount of blood.
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PHLEBOTOMIST Interview Questions



What is the life expectancy of someone with polycythemia vera?

According to an article in Blood Cancer Journal, the median survival time for people with PV is 14 years after diagnosis. The authors take this survival time from a study in which half of the participants were still alive 14 years after diagnosis.
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Can polycythemia go into remission?

A 20-year-old woman presented with polycythemia vera and was treated with phlebotomy alone for eleven years, following which all clinical manifestations of the disease disappeared. The clinical remission with normal physical findings and normal peripheral blood counts has persisted for a further 11 years.
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Will I feel better after phlebotomy?

After it's done, your blood will be thinner and flow better. You'll usually feel better, too. Some symptoms will get better, such as headaches or dizziness. Your doctor will decide how often you need phlebotomy.
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What is the most common complication of phlebotomy?

Hematoma: The most common complication of phlebotomy procedure. venipuncture on that vein. appear on the skin from rupturing of the capillaries due to the tourniquet being left on too long or too tight.
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Are phlebotomy good for you?

Bottom-Line Benefits of Therapeutic Phlebotomy

Phlebotomy helps you lower ferritin and may reduce the symptoms of too much iron. On top of that, your donation may save another's life if drawn by a center that can use the blood for others.
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Can you have too much blood drawn?

One study showed that reducing common tests at the hospital did not affect patient health or safety. Getting too many blood tests has risks. Blood tests are very safe. But they can cause other problems if you have them every day.
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Does phlebotomy lower your blood pressure?

In that study, phlebotomy lowered mean BP from 140.1 ± 12.2 mmHg to 123.8 ± 14.9 mmHg after 14 days. In another uncontrolled study, 12 patients with renal transplant and erythrocytosis received three phlebotomies of 500 ml over 6 weeks, which induced BP reductions from 153/95 mmHg to 139/85 mmHg [32].
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Why would you need a phlebotomy?

Phlebotomy is when someone uses a needle to take blood from a vein, usually in your arm. Also called a blood draw or venipuncture, it's an important tool for diagnosing many medical conditions. Usually the blood is sent to a laboratory for testing.
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How often can you draw blood same vein?

If you pull the needle out at any given time, you will need to put the needle in the sharps container and get a new one. You cannot access the same vein twice. You will need to try and find and access a vein on the opposing arm. Try not to stick your patient more than twice.
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How long does it take for a vein to heal after a blood test?

ROTATING YOUR SPOT: You let one spot heal while you use another. Its best to alternate veins. A vein takes at least a couple days to heal.
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How long does it take for water to hydrate your veins?

It can take just 5 minutes to begin rehydrating your body. On the other hand, if you drink water while eating, your body will prioritize digesting food before water. This often takes up to 120 minutes to digest water and rehydrate your body.
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How much does hemoglobin drop after phlebotomy?

On average, every 100 mL of phlebotomy was associated with a decrease in hemoglobin and hematocrit of 7.0 g/L and 1.9%, respectively. Conclusions: Phlebotomy is highly associated with changes in hemoglobin and hematocrit levels for patients admitted to an internal medicine service and can contribute to anemia.
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What causes difficult blood draw?

If you have been to a clinic or lab before and had the phlebotomist stick you more than once for a blood draw, you may have been told that you are a "difficult stick." This can happen to people for quite a few different reasons, including small or deep veins, rolling veins, dehydration, collapsing veins, constricted ...
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What can go wrong with phlebotomy?

Unsafe phlebotomy can cause adverse effects for patients; such effects are rare, but range from pain or bruising at the site of puncture, to fainting, nerve damage and haematoma.
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What are two conditions that cause polycythemia?

The most common causes of secondary polycythemia include obstructive sleep apnea, obesity hypoventilation syndrome, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Other causes include testosterone replacement therapy and heavy cigarette smoking.
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How long does it take for the body to replace a pint of blood?

How long will it take to replenish the pint of blood I donate? Your body will replace the blood volume (plasma) within 48 hours. It will take four to eight weeks for your body to completely replace the red blood cells you donated. The average adult has eight to 12 pints of blood.
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Why is hemochromatosis called the Celtic curse?

The Celtic curse refers to the disease of hereditary hemochromatosis, or HH. It is so-called because it is common in people of Celtic background: Irish, Scots, Welsh and British.
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How often does polycythemia vera turn into leukemia?

Polycythemia vera transforms to acute leukemia (blast phase) 10 years after diagnosis in about 10% of cases.
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What foods should you avoid if you have polycythemia vera?

Avoid refined foods, such as white processed sugar, bread and junk food to control inflammation as they may contain high-fat content and can increase chances of blood thickening. Avoid red meat completely and choose lean meats like chicken, cold-water fish (in moderation), pulses and beans, nuts and seeds for protein.
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What is difference between polycythemia and polycythemia vera?

Polycythemia, also called erythrocytosis, refers to an increase in red blood cell mass, noted on laboratory evaluation as increased hemoglobin and hematocrit levels. Polycythemia vera is a subtype of polycythemia and is associated with the overproduction of all 3 cell lines.
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