Cardiovascular: Haemostasis (Clotting) Flashcards
Describe 5 broard stages of the formation of a platelet-fibrin clot
First 3 are the formation of the platelet rich thrombus:
- Platelet adhesion
- Platelet activation
- Platelet aggregation
The next 2 are the stabilisation with fibrin:
- Conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin by thrombin
- Finally the polymerisation of fibrin resulting in a stable platelet-fibrin clot ( aslo known as a white clot)
What does thrombin do?
Converts fibrinogen into fibrin
Difference between aggregation and coagulation?
Aggregation - platelets
Coagulation - fibrin
Which parts of the clotting process do aspirin and warfarin act on?
- Aspirin - platelet aggregation
- Warfarin - coagulation
Detailed action of warfarin vs DOACs
By blocking the conversion of inactive vitamin k to active vitamin k warfarin takes serval days to work and also block the creation of protein C which is a natural anticoagulant.
DOACs directly block clotting factor X therefore acting much fasting without inhibiting protein C.
Why can warfarin actually temporarily increase clotting?
The factors that warfarin inhibits that making of hang around in stock piles for a while whereas protein C doesn’t. So before the clotting factors are fully blocked you actually inhibit the anti-coagulant effect of protein C first thus temporarily increasing coagulation.
Three natural coagulation inhibitors
Tissue factor pathway inhbitor
Antithrombin
Protein C
Which clotting factor is difficient in haemophilia a?
fVIII
Which clotting factor is difficient in haemophilia b?
IX
What is Von Willebrand Disease?
A lack of Von Willebrand Factor
Von Willebrand Factor helps platelet adhersion to subendothelium and also is a carrier molecule for fVIII so lacking this leads to low level of VIII
Order of rarity out of haemophilia A, B and vWB disease
Most rare
- Haemophilia B
- Haemophilia A
- Von Willebrand disease
Most common
Common aquired coagulation disorders
- Vit K deficiency
- Liver failure (liver makes many coagulation factors)
- Immune (aquired haemophilia of vWB disease)
- Anticoagulants
- Consumption of coagulation factors
What is DIC
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation
It is an explosion of thrombin
Leads to widespread deposition of circulating fibrin leading to widespread ischemia
Consumption of platelets and clotting factors to make thrombin can lead to sever bleeding
Can be causes by anything systemically traumatic such as sever sepsis or metastatic cancer