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Apex Nursing

Reference — Hematology

Bleeding Precautions Reference

For the thrombocytopenic patient, the anticoagulated patient with values out of range, and everyone in between — the thresholds, the bundle, and the signs that mean the bleeding has already started.

Educational use only. Transfusion thresholds and procedure rules are provider and facility decisions — these are common conventions for planning care. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Platelet Thresholds

Platelet CountWhat It MeansNursing Posture
<150,000/µLThrombocytopenia by definitionIdentify the cause; baseline bleeding assessment
<50,000/µLBleeding risk with procedures and traumaBleeding precautions on; procedures may need platelet support per provider
<20,000/µLRisk of spontaneous bleedingStrict precautions; minimize all punctures; frequent assessment
<10,000/µLHigh risk of spontaneous hemorrhage, including intracranialCommon prophylactic platelet transfusion threshold; neuro checks in the assessment

The Precaution Bundle

• No IM or subcutaneous injections where avoidable; smallest gauge when essential

• Minimize venipuncture — cluster draws, consider line draws per policy; pressure 5–10 minutes after any stick

• No rectal temperatures, suppositories, or enemas; no vigorous catheter manipulation

• Soft toothbrush, no flossing while severe; electric razor only

• Avoid NSAIDs and aspirin unless specifically ordered; review all meds for bleeding contribution

• Stool softeners as ordered — straining provokes bleeding (hemorrhoidal and intracranial)

• Fall prevention escalated: a minor fall is not minor at 15,000 platelets

• Avoid blood pressure cuffs over fragile skin/bruising when alternatives exist; pad side rails for severe cases per policy

Assessment: Where Bleeding Shows Up

Skin first: petechiae (the classic low-platelet sign, often lower legs first), purpura, new or spreading bruising, oozing from puncture sites and gum lines. Then the outputs: hematuria, melena or frank blood, hemoptysis, epistaxis, heavier-than-expected menses.

The one that kills: intracranial bleeding — new headache, vision change, vomiting, lethargy, or any neuro change in a severely thrombocytopenic or over-anticoagulated patient is an emergency escalation, not a recheck.

Patient Teaching

• Electric razor, soft toothbrush, no aspirin/NSAIDs without asking, careful with knives and tools

• Blow the nose gently; manage constipation rather than strain

• Pressure on any cut for a full 5–10 minutes before deciding it needs more than a bandage

• Call now for: blood in urine or stool, black tarry stool, vomiting blood, a nosebleed that will not stop, sudden severe headache

• Wear a medical alert identifier when on long-term anticoagulation

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with AABB (transfusion standards) · American Society of Hematology (ASH). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →