Anemia (pt 2/3) Hemostasis & Anti-coagulation, Heparin, Warfarin Flashcards
What are the 4 things an ideal anti-coagulant would do? (Blue Box!)
1) Prevent pathologic thrombosis
2) Limit reperfusion injury
3) Allow a normal response to vascular injury
4) Limit bleeding
What is hemostasis?
-How the body maintains fluidity of the blood
-Includes repair of vascular injury
-A balance of minimizing blood loss while preventing inadequate perfusion and thrombosis (vessel occlusion)
-Hemorrhage or thrombosis = a breakdown of hemostatic mechanisms
-Primary Hemostasis – formation of the platelet plug
-Secondary Hemostasis – formation of fibrin (coagulation cascade)
What are the 3 steps of Primary Hemostasis?
1) Adhesion
2) Activation
3) Aggregation
What occurs during the Adhesion phase of Primary Hemostasis?
When vascular endothelium is damaged and the subendothelium is exposed, vWF anchors platelets to the collagen layer of the subendothelium.
-Collagen binds to GP1a receptor
-vWF binds to GP1b receptor
What occurs during the Activation phase of Primary Hemostasis?
1) Prothrombin (Factor II) is converted to Thrombin (Factor IIa)
2) Thrombin combines with the Thrombin receptor on the plt surface to activate the platelet
3) Platelet undergoes a morphological change to increase its surface area, so there is more platelet available to interact with other platelets.
4) Platelet releases mediators necessary for aggregation (Thromboxane A2 and ADP). Serotonin is released as well (causes vasoconstriction to prevent unnecessary bleeding)
What occurs during the Aggregation phase of Primary Hemostasis?
1) Thromboxane A2 and ADP uncover the fibrinogen receptors (GP IIb/IIIa), allowing fibrinogen to be able to bind to its receptor.
2) Fibrinogen (I) attaches to its receptor and links the platelets to each other, producing a water-soluble, unstable, and friable clot = “white clot”.
Why does blood coagulate?
Due to the transformation of soluble Fibrinogen into insoluble Fibrin by the enzyme Thrombin.
What is Secondary Hemostasis?
The Coagulation Cascade
What triggers the Extrinsic Pathway?
Damage outside the blood vessels.
1) Damage triggers the release of Thromboplastin (AKA Tissue Factor AKA Factor III) from damaged cells
2) Thromboplastin activates Factor VII → VIIa
3) Factor VIIa + Factor IV (Calcium) on the surface of the platelet activates Factor X → Xa
What is the primary physiologic initiator of coagulation? !!
Thromboplastin
What triggers the Intrinsic pathway?
Triggered by damage inside the blood itself, or when it gets exposed to collagen.
1) Trauma to the blood itself or exposure of the blood to collagen in a traumatized blood vessel wall activates Factor XII → XIIa
2) XIIa activates factor XI → XIa
3) XIa activates factor IX → IXa
4) IXa combines on the platelet surface with Factors VIII and IV and activates Factor X → Xa
What are the steps of the Common Pathway?
1) Factor Xa combines on the platelet surface with activated Factor V → Va and Factor IV = conversion of Prothrombin (II) to Thrombin (IIa). -Factor X + help of others activates Factor II to IIa.
2) Thrombin converts Fibrinogen (I) to Fibrin (Ia)
3) Fibrin (I) cross-linking occurs if/when Fibrin(I) is in the presence of Factor XIII.
What does Factor IV (Calcium) Do?
Factor IV (Calcium) helps position clotting factors on the surface of the platelet so biochemical reactions can occur. Calcium is located on the surface of the platelet
What is Thrombin’s role in hemostasis?
1) Proteolytically cleaves small peptides from Fibrinogen (I) to form Fibrin (Ia) clot.
2) Activates upstream clotting factors leading to more Thrombin (sort of like positive feedback)
-Remember in Primary Hemostasis that Thrombin is responsible for plt activation
3) Activates Factor XIII to cross-link Fibrin(I), stabilizing the clot
4) Potent platelet activator and potentiates platelet growth
5) Anti-coagulant effect through activation of Protein C
-Attenuates the clotting process
Under normal circumstances, repair of vascular injury occurs without ________ and _____________ ___________.
Under normal circumstances, repair of vascular injury occurs without thrombosis and downstream ischemia.
What is Antithrombin III?
Forms complexes with and neutralizes:
-Final Common Pathway: Factors IIa & Xa
-Intrinsic Pathway: Factors IX, XIa, and XIIa
A required cofactor for Heparin.
Antithrombin deficiency is the most common reason a patient is unresponsive to Heparin.
What do All anti-coagulants and fibrinolytic drugs have as their principle toxicity?
Increased risk of bleeding
How do Indirect Thrombin Inhibitors cause their effects?
Effect is caused by their interaction with Antithrombin III (to prevent thrombin from actually working).
-Unfractionated Heparin (UFH) a.k.a. High-Molecular-Weight (HMW) Heparin
-Low-Molecular-Weight (LMW) Heparin (Has a higher ratio of anti-10a (against activated factor 10) than activated factor II activity than unfractionated heparin)
-Fondaparinux
-Couramins
The combination of AT III with unfractionated heparin increases degradation of both ______ and _______.
The combination of AT III with unfractionated heparin increases degradation of both factor Xa and thrombin.
The combination of ATIII with fondaparinux or LMW heparin more selectively increases degradation of ________.
The combination of ATIII with fondaparinux or LMW heparin more selectively increases degradation of Factor Xa.
What is Heparin’s MOA?
-Binds tightly to the Antithrombin III and causes a conformational change → exposes the active site for a more rapid interaction with the clotting factors
-Accelerates the actions of Antithrombin III 1000-fold
-Once the antithrombin-clotting factor complex is formed, heparin is released intact to bind with additional antithrombin (and inactivate more thrombin)
Unfractionated (HMW) Heparin has a high affinity for AT III and inhibits:
Factors IIa, IXa, and Xa
LMW Heparin (Enoxaparin, Dalteparin, etc) inhibits ______, but has less of an effect on _______.
LMW Heparin (Enoxaparin, Dalteparin, etc) inhibits Factor Xa, but has less of an effect on Thrombin (not as much of an effect on Factor IIa).
What are the pros of LMW Heparin compared to Unfractionated?
-Equal Efficacy
-Increased bioavailability from SQ site
-Less frequent dosing requirements
-More predictable response, less need for blood monitoring