Everything about Cryoprecipitate totally explained
Cryoprecipitate, commonly called "cryo", is a frozen blood product prepared from
plasma. Each 15 mL unit typically contains 100 IU of
factor VIII, and 250 mg of
fibrinogen. It also contains
von Willebrand factor (vWF),
factor XIII, and
fibronectin. It is often transfused as a four to six unit pool instead of as a single product. Many uses of the product have replaced by factor concentrates, but it's still routinely stocked by many
hospital blood banks.
US standards require manufacturers to test at least four units each month, and the products must have an average of 150 mg or more of fibrinogen and 80 IU of factor VIII. Individual products may actually have less than these amounts as long as the average remains above these minimums. Typical values for a unit are substantially higher, and aside from infants it's rare to
transfuse just one unit.
Like
fresh frozen plasma, compatibility testing isn't indicated, but it's given as
ABO compatible. Compatibility is reversed for plasma products: AB type is the universal plasma donor and O type is the universal plasma recipient.
Indications for giving cryoprecipitate include:
The product is manufactured by slowly thawing a unit of FFP at temperatures just above freezing (1-6 C), typically in a water bath or a refrigerator. The product is then centrifuged to remove the majority of the plasma, and the precipitate is resuspended in the remaining plasma or in sterile saline. The product may be pooled and frozen or frozen as individual units.
History
The first publication of the method of concentrating clotting factors from plasma was by
Judith Graham Pool at
Stanford University in
1964, writing in
Nature.
Cryoprecipitate was originally known as "Cryoprecipitate AHF", where AHF stands for "Anti-hemophiliac factor." AHF is now known as Factor VIII.
According to Dr. Charles Abidgaard, who was a Stanford medical resident at the time:
They obtained frozen plasma in very large containers that they got
from Japan. They would thaw that and send her [Pool] samples of the
liquid parts to assay. She wasn't really finding very much Factor
VIII activity, and then someone mentioned to her that when they thawed
this large amount of plasma, there was always some mucky stuff at the
bottom of it, and she said, "Well, send me some of that, too."
She found that at least half of the Factor VIII activity was in the
residue. What was happening that, because of the large volume, as the
mass thawed, it stayed cold. So this was cryoprecipitate.
Others had been close to discovering cryoprecipitate but failed to make the connection between the lack of plasma clotting activity after thawing and the precipitate. According to Dr. Frederick Rickles:
I made a mistake in an experiment, and instead of putting frozen
plasma back in the freezer at the end of the day's experiment, I
instead stuck it in the refrigerator. When I came in the next
morning, there was all this junk in the bottom of the tube which I
spun out, and I used the plasma for my experiment. My experiment
didn't work because there was no Factor VIII in it. And I went back
and fished the junk out of the trash and assayed the junk and got
these outrageously high values for Factor VIII in the junk, and
neither Charlie nor I believed it, and so it was one of those things.
And sure enough, about a year later Judith Graham Pool discovered
cryoprecipitate.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cryoprecipitate'.
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