Wj. Gaine et Pg. Turner, Postoperative blood loss into plaster casts after clubfoot surgery: An experimental model, J PED ORT B, 8(2), 1999, pp. 147-149
With major surgery in mind, a simple experimental model was used to study t
he potential blood loss into plaster of Paris casts. Three lower limb model
s were used to represent a 3-year-old, a 1-year-old, and a 6-month-old. Two
thicknesses of plaster were compared in terms of blood volume required to
produce staining on the surface of the cast. Whole blood from the laborator
y was infused onto the plaster models at various rates. While allowing for
the limitations of the model, the blood volume required before staining thr
ough the plaster when three plaster rolls were used was an average of 160 m
L in the 6-month-old model and 310 mL in the 3-year-old modal, representing
31.4% and 29.5% of total blood volume, respectively. When only two rolls o
f plaster of Paris were used, an average of 80 mL in the 6-month-old and 18
0 mL in the 3-year-old model were lost, representing 15.7% and 17% of total
blood volume, respectively. This potential blood loss should be borne in m
ind during major pediatric foot surgery. The use of drains, releasing the t
ourniquet before wound closure, and casting with two rather than three roll
s of plaster are suggested precautions.