## Correct Answer: C. 6 hours TRALI (Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury) is a serious, potentially fatal complication of blood transfusion characterized by acute respiratory distress occurring within a defined temporal window. The maximum duration for TRALI to manifest is **6 hours post-transfusion**, making this the critical discriminator in transfusion medicine practice. TRALI is mediated by two proposed mechanisms: (1) immune-mediated (HLA or HNA antibodies in donor plasma reacting with recipient leukocytes), and (2) non-immune (biologically active lipids and cytokines in stored blood). The acute inflammatory cascade triggered during transfusion leads to pulmonary capillary endothelial damage, increased vascular permeability, and pulmonary edema. Clinically, patients present with dyspnea, hypoxemia, bilateral infiltrates on chest X-ray, and hemodynamic instability. The 6-hour window is critical for diagnosis and reporting to blood banks—any respiratory distress beyond 6 hours post-transfusion is classified as Delayed TRALI (DTRALI) or other post-transfusion complications. This temporal definition is standardized in international transfusion medicine guidelines and Indian blood bank protocols, enabling rapid identification and management. Recognition within this window allows for immediate supportive care (oxygen, mechanical ventilation if needed) and investigation of the implicated blood product. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. 24 hours** — This is wrong because 24 hours exceeds the diagnostic window for TRALI. Events occurring 24 hours post-transfusion fall outside the acute TRALI definition and are classified as Delayed TRALI (DTRALI) or other post-transfusion complications. NBE may trap students who conflate TRALI with other delayed transfusion reactions (e.g., delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction, which can occur days to weeks later). **B. 48 hours** — This is wrong because 48 hours is far beyond the acute TRALI timeframe. This option represents a common misconception that TRALI is a delayed reaction similar to other post-transfusion complications. The 48-hour window is sometimes associated with other transfusion reactions (e.g., febrile non-hemolytic transfusion reaction complications), creating confusion. NBE uses this to test whether students know the specific 6-hour cutoff. **D. 12 hours** — This is wrong because 12 hours exceeds the maximum 6-hour window for acute TRALI. While respiratory symptoms may occasionally persist beyond 6 hours, the diagnostic criterion for TRALI requires onset within 6 hours. Symptoms appearing between 6–12 hours are classified as Delayed TRALI. This option may trap students who round up or confuse TRALI with other acute transfusion complications with longer windows. ## High-Yield Facts - **TRALI onset: ≤6 hours post-transfusion** — this is the diagnostic criterion; beyond 6 hours = Delayed TRALI (DTRALI). - **TRALI pathophysiology: immune-mediated (HLA/HNA antibodies)** or **non-immune (biologically active lipids/cytokines)** mechanisms. - **TRALI clinical presentation: acute dyspnea, hypoxemia, bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, fever, hypotension** — mimics ARDS. - **TRALI incidence: ~1 in 5,000 transfusions** in India; FFP and platelet concentrates carry higher risk than RBC transfusions. - **TRALI management: supportive care (oxygen, mechanical ventilation), diuretics contraindicated** (non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema). - **Reporting TRALI: mandatory to blood bank within 6-hour window** for donor investigation and product quarantine under Indian blood bank regulations. ## Mnemonics **TRALI Timing: 6-Hour Rule** **T**ransfusion → **R**espiratory distress → **A**cute lung injury within **L**ess than **I**6 hours (6-hour cutoff). Use this when any transfusion-related respiratory complication is mentioned—always ask: 'Did it happen within 6 hours?' **TRALI vs DTRALI** **TRALI = 0–6 hours** (acute, immune/non-immune), **DTRALI = 6–72 hours** (delayed, usually immune). This distinction is critical for reporting and diagnosis in Indian blood banks. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs TRALI with other transfusion reactions (hemolytic, febrile, allergic) that have different temporal windows (hours to days), hoping students will conflate them. The 24-hour and 48-hour options exploit confusion with Delayed TRALI or other post-transfusion complications, testing whether students know the specific 6-hour acute TRALI cutoff. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary care settings, TRALI is often underdiagnosed because it mimics sepsis or cardiogenic pulmonary edema. The 6-hour window is your diagnostic anchor—any acute respiratory distress during or immediately after transfusion (within 6 hours) should trigger TRALI suspicion, leading to immediate blood bank notification, product quarantine, and supportive care rather than diuretics. _Reference: Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease (Ch. 4: Hemodynamic Disorders); Transfusion Medicine guidelines (Indian Society of Blood Transfusion and Immunohematology); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (Ch. 180: Transfusion Biology)_
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