Disorders of Haemostasis Flashcards
Diapedisis
Minor haemorrhage- Red cells coming out of the gaps almost one by one
Could be fatal in the brain
Epistasis
Haemoptasis
Haematemesis
Bleeding into the nostrils
Coughing up blood
Vomiting fresh blood
Haemathrosis
Hyphaema
Melaena
Dysentery
Haemorrhage into joints
Bleeding into the anterior chamber of the eye
Bleeding in the upper alimentary tract or swalling blood from resp tract
Diarrhoea containing blood
Ecchymoses with a few petechiae and a few purapuras
Paintbrush or suffuse haemorrhages
Haematoma
Trauma around vulva after farrowing, IV “fishing”
Pigments in bruises in stages
Blue purple early on: poorly oxygenated or deoxygenated haemoglobin
Greeny, blue bruise in between stage: Bilirubin and biliverdin
Later stage: Haemosiderin (golden) in macrophages
What is the lump left behind by a haematoma?
Once macrophages have gobbled up RBCs, platelets, fibrin, etc. Granulation tissue around the periphery after about 5 days. It will fill the gap where all the blood was with collagen. It will contract down but some can be persistent
Where are the most serious haemorrhages no matter the size?
Inside the skull, increases intercranial pressure
Bleeding into the pericardial sac
Retinal bleeding
Bleeding in the brain
What is good about an internal bleed?
You can reabsorb and recycle- salvage iron and plasma proteins i.e. haemangiosarcomas of the spleen
Otherwise hypoproteinaemia, iron deficiency, anaemia
How much blood can we safely take?
10% of bodyweight
(In a healthy animal you could take 20% but you never know, are they truly healthy)
Beyond 20%= hypovolaemic shock
Beyond 50% loss (trauma) of blood volume quickly almost guarunteed fatal unless someone is standing by with a transfusion bag
Causes of haemorrhage
Trauma (first thought), bleeding tumours, aspergillosis (necrotising), bleeding disorder, etc
Morphological response to injury
Acute Injury
Vasoconstriction
Primary plug (platelets) (sec/min)
Definitive plug (fibrin) (min/hr)
Fibrinolysis and repair (days)
If you didn’t have enough platelets, how long would you bleed for?
Not too long because eventually your body would still form the plug with fibrin
Primary Haemostasis
Bleeding immediately after venipuncture, small volume bleeds, petechiae common, haematomas uncommon, bleeding from mucous membranes and skin, bleeding from multiple sites.
Primary haemostatic disorder
Secondary haemostasis
Delayed bleeding after venipuncture, large volume bleeds, petechiae rare, haematomas (palpable bleeds), bleeding into muscles, joints and/or body cavities, bleeding may be localized, +/- mucosal bleeding
Epistasis- is it primary or secondary haemostasis?
Primary or secondary haemostasis
Disorder of Primary Haemostasis
After a blood vessel is damaged, instant vasoconstriction (doesn’t help much with preventing a haemorrhage)- need platelets coming in. VW factor becomes important. Platelets releasing cytokines and chemokines- which lures other platelets and then they all adhere to each other. At this point, at the end of the primary platelet plug forming.
** one part of these steps going on, it is never total, but is it enough to prevent bleeding?
Thrombocytopenia
Most common in domestic animals- not having enough platelets in circulation
* decreased platelet production (accompanying neutropenias +/- non regenerative anaemias) or increased platelet destruction (premature destruction, esp. immune mediated is the most common mechanism in a dog)*
The next 3 are possible, but unlikely to drop your platelet count low enough to make you bleed: consumption of platelets (something going on when they are being used up, DIC- numerous little bleeds- less dramatic consumption does occur e.g. heartworm, haemangiosarcoma), sequestration of platelets (most platelets are in spleen stored- if spleen or liver enlarged then more platelets remain instead of circulate. OR acute interstitial pneumonias- lots of damage to lots of pulmonary capillaries simultaneously- ones just sequestered in pulmonary capillaries), haemorrhage (lose red cells, leukocytes, and platelets- you have to think, is it caused by the haemorrhage or contributing to the haemorrhage?)
Most common thrombocytopenia in cats and in dogs?
Cats- decreased platelet production (bone marrow problem)
Dogs- immune mediated destruction
Thrombocytopathies
Platelets not functioning properly
Where is vWF unnecessary when there is a bleed?
In capillaries, low blood flow, do not need vWF