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. 2010 Oct 6;32(2):205–217. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehq406

Table 4.

Bleeding

Life-threatening or disabling bleeding
 Fatal bleeding OR
 Bleeding in a critical area or organ, such as intracranial, intraspinal, intraocular, or pericardial necessitating pericardiocentesis, or intramuscular with compartment syndrome OR
 Bleeding causing hypovolemic shock or severe hypotension requiring vasopressors or surgery OR
 Overt source of bleeding with drop in haemoglobin of ≥5 g/dL or whole blood or packed red blood cells (RBCs) transfusion ≥4 unitsa
Major bleeding
 Overt bleeding either associated with a drop in the haemoglobin level of at least 3.0 g/dL or requiring transfusion of two or three units of whole blood/RBC AND
 Does not meet criteria of life-threatening or disabling bleeding
Minor Bleeding
 Any bleeding worthy of clinical mention (e.g. access site haematoma) that does not qualify as life-threatening, disabling or major

aGiven one unit of packed RBC typically will raise blood haemoglobin concentration by 1 g/dL, an estimated decrease in haemoglobin will be calculated.