1.3 Haemostasis and Bleeding Disorders Flashcards
What is haemostasis?
A mechanism to stop bleeding involving multiple integrated steps resulting in the foramtion of a plug that closes the damaged site on the blood vessel.
What are the 4 steps of haemostasis?
- Vascoconstriction
- Priamry haemostasis
- Secondary haemostasis
- Fibrinolysis
What is vasoconstriction?
Vascular spasm of smooth muscle in vessel walls, which narrow vessel and slow blood flow
Slow blood flow = contact activation of platelets + coagulation factors
Transient effect, loaclised to damaged area
Mediated by sympathic nervous system and enhanced by local secretin factors (endothelin)
What is primary haemostasis?
Platelet adherence to vessel walls by binding VW factor on collagen surface
What are platelets?
Small, thin cell filaments broken from megakaryocytes in bone marrow in a process called thombopoiesis
What happens when platelets activate?
Shape change (pseudopodia) = arms to grab each other better
Degranulation (promotes further vasoconstriction)
What is secondary haemostasis?
Fibrin starts to be deposited
The coagulation cascade is part of secondary haemostasis. How does it work?
What is the difference between platelet activation and platelet aggregation?
Platelet activation = shape change + secretion of granules
Platelet aggregation = recruit additional platelets to form plug
What is the mechanism behind depositing fibrin as part of secondary haemostasis?
- Tissue factor exposure activates coagulation cascade to generate thrombin
- Cleaves fibrinogen into insoluble fibrin (meshwork)
- Activates platelets to form primary plug
The coagulation cascade is an important part of the secondary haemostasis mechanism. How does the cascade work?
Activation of a series clotting factors to increase stabilisation
- Each enzyme is in its inactive form (zymogen)
- Activation catalyses the next reaction and so on
- Results in thrombin production (thrombin activates platelets)
What are the 3 pathways that make up the coagulation cascade?
- Extrinsic = repsone to damage (fast + short, vit. K dependant)
- Intrinsic = exposure to collagen (longer than extrinsic)
- Common = activation of factor X via extrinsic + intrinsic pathways (thombin + clot stabilisation)
What is fibrinolysis?
Clot stabilisation + resorption
Prevents clot from growing + causing problems from plasmin formation (plasmin breaks down clot - fibrinogen + fibrin)
Plasmin causes the clot to breakdown by lysing fibrinogen + fibrin. How is plasmin formed?
Tissue plasminogen activators (tPA) is released from endothelial cells during coagulation cascade
Plasmin formation = fibrinolysis
What are the 3 kinds of inherited bleeding disorders?
- Absence / deficiency of clotting factors
- Haemophilia
- Von Willebrand disease