Disorders of blood coagulation Flashcards
primary haemostasis
- endothelium releases von-Willebrand factors, which circulates in the blood
- when collagen is exposed to blood because of damage, von Willebrand factors bind to it
- platelets express receptors for both collagen and von Willebrand factors and becomes activated when these proteins bind to them
- activated platelets express functional fibrinogen receptors
what stores von Willebrand factors
weibel palade bodies
secondary haemostasis
-Tissue factor (TF), expressed by nearly all sub endothelial cells activates the coagulation cascade to initiate a minor burst of thrombin.
-Factor FVlla binds to Tissue Factor, which ultimately leads to conversion of prothrombin to thrombin
-Thrombin activates receptors on platelets as well as the endothelium, amplifying platelet aggregation and initiating release of stored von Willebrand Factor from endothelial cells.
-Thrombin activates two cofactors, Factor Vllla
and Factor Va which subsequently form calcium ion-dependent complexes on the surface of platelets with Factor IXa (tenase complex) and Factor Xa (the prothrombinase complex).
-These
complexes greatly accelerate production of Factor Xa and thrombin, respectively. This is the amplification stage of the coagulation cascade
-The greatly increased production of thrombin via tenase and prothrombinase contributes considerably
more to the process. Thrombin will convert fibrinogen to the fibrin mesh
Fibrinolysis
- Plasminogen is activated to plasmin by tissue plasminogen activator, t-PA.
- Plasmin degrades the fibrin mesh to fibrin degradation products which can be cleared.
what can be used as a marker to check for ongoing fibrinolysis
d-dimer
Natural anticoagulant (antithrombin)
-Antithrombin (AT) is a serpin (serine protease inhibitor)
-Activity greatly enhanced by
binding to heparan binding sites on
endothelial cells
-Major checkpoint to inhibit
coagulation (thrombin, IXa, Xa)
Natural anticoagulant (Protein c and s)
-Protein C and protein S are natural anticoagulant plasma proteins
-Protein C is activated by thrombin bound to thrombomodulin (TM) on
endothelial cells to form activated protein C (APC)
-Protein S is an APC cofactor which
helps binding to cell surfaces
-APC degrades cofactors FVa and
FVllla
what is haemophilia
- failure to clot leading to haemorrhage
- caused by a mutations in coagulation factor( haemophilia A and B)
- causes by platelet disorder(von Willebrand disease)
- caused by collagen abnormalities ( fragile blood vessels and bruising)
what is thrombophilia
excessive clotting leading to thrombosis
what is disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
whole body clots
2 types of haemophilia and which factor is mutated in each
- Haemophilia A - Mutated FVlll
- Haemophilia B - mutated FIX
what is von Willebrand disease
inherited defect/ deficiency in vWF
what are the 3 bleeding disorders
Haemophilia A
haemophilia B
von willebrand disease
what is factor V Leiden mutation
resistance to activated protein C (APC) which means FVa is not inactivated which increases risk of DVT
what is antithrombin difiecency
thrombin,IXa and FXa are not inactivated which increases risk of DVT