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Doctors’ Answers to “Frequently Asked Questions” – Dehydration

These comments are made for the purpose of discussion and should NOT be used as recommendations for or against therapies or other treatments. An individual patient is always advised to consult their own physician.

Dehydration/Blood Loss

Question: What is the relationship between mild to moderate dehydration

and the body’s ability to compensate for blood loss (post surgery)?

Can mild or moderate dehydration suppress the body’s natural

ability to heal surgical wounds, and can it affect the clotting

factors of blood?

What is the accuracy of blood tests that show a blood hematocrit

level of 9? And what exactly does this low level

mean, other than the patient is in dire need of blood? (The

patient’s hematocrit level was 30+, 2 hours post transfusion of

4 units whole blood and 4 units FFP).

Answer: When the body becomes dehydrated, the blood count rises slightly. The whole system also contracts as the blood vessels are constricted, changing the effective blood volume. However, dehydration does not change the bodies ability to clot or heal surgical wounds. Blood tests for blood counts are incredibly accurate(although mistakes are always possible). However, it sounds like this is probably an accurate count. One usually expects a rise in hematocrit of about 4 or 5 points per unit of blood. Consequently, a transfusion of 4 units would raise the hematocrit to 25 to 30 depending on the patient’s size.