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How to Calculate Estimated Blood Loss

What is Estimated Blood Loss?

Estimated blood loss (EBL) during surgery uses pre- and post-operative haematocrit values with the Gross formula to quantify blood lost.

Formula

Estimated blood loss (mL) = Hemoglobin change (g/dL) × Weight (kg) × Estimated blood volume (70 mL/kg) / Pre-operative Hgb
PreHgb
Pre-operative hemoglobin (g/dL)
PostHgb
Post-operative hemoglobin (g/dL)
Weight
Body weight (kg)
BloodLoss
Estimated blood loss (mL)

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1EBL = EBV × (HCT_pre − HCT_post) / HCT_avg
  2. 2EBV ≈ 70 mL/kg (average adult)
  3. 3HCT as decimals (40% → 0.40)
  4. 4Clinical estimate only — always correlate with signs

Worked Examples

Input
80 kg, HCT pre 0.42, post 0.30
Result
EBL = 5600 × 0.12/0.36 ≈ 1,867 mL

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is estimated blood loss important?

Helps surgeons/anesthesiologists assess adequate fluid replacement, need for transfusion, ongoing bleeding risk. Underestimating = inadequate resuscitation; overestimating = unnecessary transfusions.

Is hemoglobin drop a reliable estimate?

Decent proxy. But affected by fluid administered, ongoing losses. Direct measurement (weighing gauze, cell salvage) more accurate. Hemoglobin drop estimates minimum loss.

What about ongoing oozing?

Persistent low-grade bleeding can add up. Monitor hourly drain output post-op. > 200 mL/hr suggests coagulopathy or inadequate hemostasis. Intervention needed.

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