NEETPGAI
BlogComparePricing
Log inStart Free
NEETPGAI

AI-powered NEET PG preparation platform. Master all 19 subjects with adaptive MCQs, AI tutoring, and spaced repetition.

Product

  • Subjects
  • Previous Year Questions
  • Compare
  • Pricing
  • Blog

Features

  • Adaptive MCQ Practice
  • AI Tutor
  • Mock Tests
  • Spaced Repetition

Resources

  • Blog
  • Study Guides
  • NEET PG Updates
  • Help Center

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Stay updated

© 2026 NEETPGAI. All rights reserved.
    Subjects/Physiology/Blood Physiology
    Blood Physiology
    medium
    heart-pulse Physiology

    What makes CPDA superior than ACD for blood storage

    A. Decreased release of O2
    B. The fall in 2,3 DPG is less
    C. It is less acidic
    D. It has less P50

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: B. The fall in 2,3 DPG is less CPDA (citrate-phosphate-dextrose-adenosine) is superior to ACD (acid-citrate-dextrose) primarily because it better preserves **2,3-DPG levels** during blood storage. During storage, red blood cells undergo metabolic changes; 2,3-DPG (2,3-diphosphoglycerate) is progressively depleted in both anticoagulants, but CPDA's inclusion of adenosine and phosphate helps maintain ATP levels in stored RBCs, which in turn slows the rate of 2,3-DPG degradation. ACD, lacking adenosine, allows more rapid ATP depletion and consequently faster 2,3-DPG loss. The clinical significance is that 2,3-DPG is critical for oxygen unloading at tissue level—it shifts the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve rightward (increases P50). When 2,3-DPG falls excessively (as in ACD-stored blood), transfused RBCs have a leftward-shifted curve, meaning they hold onto oxygen and deliver it poorly to tissues, causing "storage lesion." CPDA blood, with better-preserved 2,3-DPG, restores normal oxygen delivery more rapidly post-transfusion. This is why CPDA is preferred in Indian blood banks for routine transfusions, especially in critical care and perioperative settings where tissue oxygenation is paramount. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Decreased release of O2** — This is backwards and contradicts the mechanism. CPDA actually *improves* O₂ release by maintaining 2,3-DPG, which increases P50 and rightward-shifts the dissociation curve. ACD blood (with depleted 2,3-DPG) shows *decreased* O₂ release. This option confuses the pathophysiology of storage lesion and may trap students who memorize without understanding the curve dynamics. **C. It is less acidic** — While CPDA may have slightly different pH buffering than ACD, acidity per se is not the primary discriminator between these anticoagulants. Both maintain reasonable pH during storage. The NBE trap here is offering a plausible-sounding biochemical difference (pH) that students might confuse with the real mechanism. Acidity affects RBC viability but not the specific advantage of CPDA over ACD. **D. It has less P50** — This is incorrect and contradictory. CPDA preserves 2,3-DPG, which *increases* P50 (rightward shift of curve), meaning oxygen is released *more* readily. ACD blood, with depleted 2,3-DPG, has a *lower* P50 (leftward shift). This option directly inverts the correct physiology and is a classic NBE trap for students who confuse the direction of the curve shift. ## High-Yield Facts - **CPDA contains adenosine**, which maintains ATP in stored RBCs, slowing 2,3-DPG degradation compared to ACD. - **2,3-DPG depletion** during storage causes leftward shift of oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve, reducing tissue oxygen delivery (storage lesion). - **CPDA-preserved blood** restores normal oxygen unloading within 24 hours post-transfusion; ACD blood takes longer, increasing risk of tissue hypoxia. - **P50 increases** when 2,3-DPG is high (rightward curve shift = better O₂ release); P50 decreases when 2,3-DPG is low (leftward shift = poor O₂ release). - **Storage lesion** includes RBC shape changes, K⁺ leak, and 2,3-DPG loss; CPDA mitigates 2,3-DPG loss more effectively than ACD. ## Mnemonics **CPDA > ACD: Remember 'A' for Adenosine** CPDA has **A**denosine (and **P**hosphate), which preserves ATP → maintains 2,3-DPG. ACD lacks adenosine → ATP drops → 2,3-DPG drops → poor O₂ delivery. Use this when comparing anticoagulants in blood bank questions. **2,3-DPG Loss = Leftward Shift = Bad** Low 2,3-DPG → Hb holds O₂ tightly → curve shifts LEFT → P50 DOWN → tissues starve. CPDA preserves 2,3-DPG → curve stays RIGHT → P50 UP → tissues get O₂. Recall this when asked about storage lesion or transfusion efficacy. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "decreased O₂ release" (option A) and "less P50" (option D) as plausible-sounding alternatives to trap students who confuse the direction of the oxygen-hemoglobin curve shift or who conflate "storage lesion" with "improved oxygenation." The correct answer requires understanding that CPDA *preserves* 2,3-DPG, which *improves* oxygen delivery, not decreases it. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian blood banks, CPDA-stored RBCs are preferred for elective surgery and critical care because they restore normal oxygen delivery faster than ACD. A patient transfused with ACD blood in the ICU may show persistent tissue hypoxia despite adequate hemoglobin, a phenomenon Indian intensivists recognize as "storage lesion"—CPDA mitigates this risk significantly. _Reference: Guyton & Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology Ch. 32 (Oxygen Transport); Robbins & Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease Ch. 14 (Blood Disorders); KD Tripathi Essentials of Medical Pharmacology Ch. 18 (Blood & Blood Products)_

    Practice similar questions

    Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.

    Start Practicing Free More Physiology Questions