Abstract
Patient Blood Management (PBM) has evolved from a transfusion-centered practice to a structured, patient-focused perioperative strategy aimed at improving surgical outcomes while preserving blood resources. In the operating room, where bleeding risk is anticipated and modifiable, PBM requires proactive intervention rather than reactive transfusion. This review synthesizes current evidence on perioperative blood conservation strategies specifically relevant to surgeons and anesthesiologists. Preoperative optimization begins with systematic identification and correction of anemia, most commonly iron deficiency, using appropriately timed oral or intravenous iron therapy and, in selected cases, erythropoiesis-stimulating agents. Careful management of anticoagulant and antiplatelet therapies, early recognition of acquired or inherited coagulopathies, and protocol-driven reversal strategies further reduce perioperative hemorrhagic risk. Intraoperatively, blood conservation depends on meticulous surgical technique, respect for anatomical planes, minimally invasive approaches, and the judicious use of advanced energy devices and topical hemostatic agents. Pharmacologic interventions—particularly tranexamic acid administered with appropriate timing and dosing—have demonstrated consistent reductions in blood loss and transfusion requirements across multiple surgical disciplines. Goal-directed coagulation management guided by viscoelastic testing allows targeted correction of specific hemostatic deficits while minimizing unnecessary blood product exposure. Acute normovolemic hemodilution and intraoperative cell salvage provide additional benefit in selected high-blood-loss procedures. Collectively, these multimodal strategies shift perioperative care from product-driven transfusion toward physiology-based blood conservation. When embedded within institutional protocols and supported by multidisciplinary collaboration, perioperative PBM reduces transfusion exposure, decreases morbidity, shortens hospital stay, and promotes sustainable stewardship of blood resources without compromising patient safety.