Pathoma 4.2 Secondary Hemostasis, 4.3 Other Disorders of Hemostasis

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Clotting factors released from liver in inactive form, what 3 things can activate them?

1) Exposure to activating substance 2) Phospholipid surface (platelet surface) 3) Calcium

Overactive plasmin (disorder of fibrinolysis) is seen in

1) Radical Prostatectomy: release urokinase, activates plasmin 2) Cirrhosis of liver: reduced production of alpha2-anti-plasmin

DIC labs

1) decreased platelets (using up platelets for plugs everywhere) 2) increased PT/PTT (coag factors used for plugs everywhere) 3) decreased fibrinogen (used up to link platelet plugs everywhere 4) MAHA (shear on microthrombi everywhere) 5) elevated D-dimer

How can you tell anti-FVIII inhibitor vs. Hemophilia A?

Mix patient's blood with normal blood(Mixing study) Hemophilia A: corrects PTT Anti-FVIII inhibitor: does NOT correct PTT

DIC secondary to

Obstetric complication Sepsis Adenocarcinoma Acute promyelocytic leukemia (AML) Rattlesnake bit

What lab test do you use to monitor liver's affect on coagulation: PT or PTT?

PT (II, VII, IX, X) VII has shortest half life

Secondary hemostasis labs

PT/PTT

Why do we give newborns vitamin K?

Vitamin K generated mainly by bacteria in gut, babies don't have this flora yet

Hemophilia A genetic transmission

X-linked (more common in males), but often de novo

Coagulation factor inhibitor

acquired Ab against coagulation factor

What deactivates plasmin

alpha2-anti-plasmin (liver)

How can obstetric complication lead to DIC?

amnion contains Tissue Factor, leaks into maternal circulation, triggers DIC

Why does DIC (coag activation) eventually lead to bleeding?

bleeding (platelets and clotting factors consumed from massive coag cascade activation so cant' clot bleed where you actually need it, e.g. IV sites, mucosal surface)

Most common vWF disease

decreased vWF (autosomal dominant)

Hemophilia A clinicl presentation

deep tissue, joint and post-surgical bleeding

vWF disease treatment?

desmopression (increase vWF release from Weibel-Palade bodies)

Why can large-volume transfusion give you coagulation disorder?

dilutes coagulation factors

How can sepsis lead to DIC?

endotoxin from bacteria walls activates coag cascade mø response (IL, TNF) activates coag cascade

Disorder of fibrinolysis clinical presentation

exactly same as DIC

Why can you get thrombosis in Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT)?

fragments of destroyed platelets may activate remaining platelets, thrombosis

Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT) pathophysiology

heparin forms complexes with platelet factor 4, IgG Ab's against this drug complex

Hemophilia A labs

increased PTT, normal PT decreased FVIII Normal platelet count and bleeding time

vWF disease labs

increased bleeding time (poor platelet adhesion) increased PTT, normal PT Abnormal ristocetin test

Why can long-term antibiotics give you bleeding disorder?

knockout gut flora that produces vitamin K

vWF disease presents with

mild mucosal and skin bleeding (low vWF, poor platelet adhesion)

How can adenocarcinoma lead to DIC?

mucin can activate coag cascade

Why do you have high PTT in vWF disease?

need vWF to stabilize FVIII

Disorder of fibrinolysis

overactive plasmin, excessive cleavage of both fibrinogen (clots) and coagulation factors(!)

DIC definition

pathologic activation of coag cascade

Hemophilia A treatment

recombinant FVIII

Ristocetin test

risotcetin causes platelets to aggregate together missing vWF, can't aggregate with ristocetin

Hemophilia B clinical presentation

same as Hemophilia A

DIC treatment

treat underlying cause give blood products as needed

Most common coagulation disorder

vWF disease

How can rattlesnake lead to DIC?

venom activates coag cascade

DIC leads initially to

widespread microthrombi, ischemia and infraction

Most common coagulation factor inhibitor?

Anti-FVIII

How can AML lead to DIC?

Auer rods can enter circulation trigger coag cascade

Disorder of fibrinolysis treatment

Aminocaproic acid (blocks tPA, plasmin formation)

How can you tell Disorder of fibrinolysis from DIC?

D-Dimer normal (no actual clots, unlike DIC where there's clots everywhere) others same: increased bleeding time, normal platelet count increased PT/PTT (plasmin cleaves coag factors too)

Best screening test for DIC

D-dimer (shows entire coag cascade is activated including the splitting of fibrin, end stage dissolution of clot)

Secondary hemostasis disorders clinical features

Deep tissue bleeding into muscles and joints Rebleeding after surgical/dental proceduers

Hemophilia B genetic deficiency

FIX ("b" is upside down 9)

Hemophilia A genetic deficiency in

FVIII ("a" "8")


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