Equine Immunology and Hematology II Flashcards
Primary hemostasis covers up to ___ while secondary hemostasis is for ___
Clot formation
Fibrin formation and clot stabilization
Differentiate between disorders of Primary and Secondary Hemostasis
Primary: vascular and platelet diseases
- Mucosal bleeding, petechiation, ecchymoses, melena
Secondary: soluble coagulation factors
- Hemorrhage, prolonged bleeding, hematomas
Tests of hemostatic function
Activated clotting time: intrinsic APTT: intrinsic and common PT: extrinsic and common Thromboelastometry, thromboelastography FDPs (lab dependent) Fibrinogen Factor assays
Coagulopathy
Inherited disorders: coagulation factor deficiency
Acquired: vasculitis, thrombocytopenia, DIC, toxicity (warfarin, sweet clover)
Factor VIII deficiency (Hemophilia A)
X linked recessive
Most common deficiency in horses
Abnormal intrinsic pathway: Abnormal APTT with normal PT
Dx: Eval factor VIII activity, hx of hemorrhage
Poor prognosis
There are other inherited; not important
Vasculitis (acquired)
Inflammation and necrosis of the vessel walls, causes: infectious, toxic, immune-mediated, neoplastic
CS: Dermal, SQ edema, skin infarction, necrosis, exudation
Skin and MM: hyperemia, petechiae, ecchymosis, ulcers
Cellulitis, laminitis, thrombophlebitis
Additional Dx: Punch biopsy - N0 inflammation, immune complex deposition
Vasculitis DDx
Equine purpura hemorrhagica
Equine viral arteritis
Equine infectious anemia
Anaplasma phagocytophila
Equine purpura hemorrhagica (EPH)
Strep equi equi after vaccination or exposure
Other less common bateria can cause
Strangles
Vasculitis with edema and hemorrhage - Infarctive syndrome possible = coagulative necrosis of muscle
CS: severe limb edema, mucosal petechiation, fever
Dx: Skin biopsy, Strep equi M protein Ab
Tx: Corticosteroids, antimicrobials (penicillin)
Equine viral arteritis
4 clinical syndromes: panvasculitis, abortion, conjunctivitis, neonatal pneumonia
Transmission: Semen of persistently infected stallions, aerosolized virus, fomites
ID of carrier stallions and vaccination crucial for disease control
Anaplasma phagocytophila
Vector: Ixodes scapularis
- Late fall, winter, spring
CS: limb edema, fever, petechiation, ataxia, anemia, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia
Dx: morulae in granulocytes, serum PCR, serum IFA
Tx: Oxytetracycline
Good prognosis
LIMB EDEMA NOT AS SEVERE AS PURPURA
Equine infectious anemia
Reportable, USDA regulated
Most infected horses are inapparent carriers
CS: Acute - fever, thrombocytopenia, petechiae, Chronic - anemia, edema, weight loss
Dx: Coggin’s test
- travel, import, competition, change of address or ownership
Mainstay of control is removal of positive horses from population
Thrombocytopenia
Platelet count is <100,000/uL
- <30,000 = clinical bleeding
- <10,000 = spontaneous hemorrhage
Causes: decreased production (bone marrow disease, drugs), sequestration (splenomegaly), increased consumption (DIC, hemorrhage), increased destruction (infectious, immune-mediated diseases)
CS: Petechial and ecchymotic hemorrhage, epistaxis, melena, hematuria, hyphema, hematoma, hemorrhage
Thrombocytopenia
DDx: EIA, Purpura, anaplasma
Inciting factor often not found (idiopathic, infectious, neoplastic, drug)
Increased platelet surface bound immunoglobulins or complement target normal platelet antigens or “noel” Ag
- Platelet destruction and removal by MPS primarily in spleen or liver
Thrombocytopenia Dx
Negative Coggin’s, normal PT PTT, normal to increased megakaryocytes in bone marrow, increased platelet bound Ab
- Platelet C3 test, platelet bound IgG, IgM
Presumptive Dx: thrombocytopenia, normal coag panel, Coggins neg
Tx of thrombocytopenia
Stop admin of all exogenous compounds, tx primary dz, corticosteroids, transfusion