Equine Immunology and Hematology II Flashcards

1
Q

Primary hemostasis covers up to ___ while secondary hemostasis is for ___

A

Clot formation

Fibrin formation and clot stabilization

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2
Q

Differentiate between disorders of Primary and Secondary Hemostasis

A

Primary: vascular and platelet diseases
- Mucosal bleeding, petechiation, ecchymoses, melena
Secondary: soluble coagulation factors
- Hemorrhage, prolonged bleeding, hematomas

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3
Q

Tests of hemostatic function

A
Activated clotting time: intrinsic
APTT: intrinsic and common
PT: extrinsic and common
Thromboelastometry, thromboelastography
FDPs (lab dependent)
Fibrinogen
Factor assays
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4
Q

Coagulopathy

A

Inherited disorders: coagulation factor deficiency

Acquired: vasculitis, thrombocytopenia, DIC, toxicity (warfarin, sweet clover)

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5
Q

Factor VIII deficiency (Hemophilia A)

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

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6
Q

Vasculitis (acquired)

A

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

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7
Q

Vasculitis DDx

A

Equine purpura hemorrhagica
Equine viral arteritis
Equine infectious anemia
Anaplasma phagocytophila

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8
Q

Equine purpura hemorrhagica (EPH)

A

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)

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9
Q

Equine viral arteritis

A

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

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10
Q

Anaplasma phagocytophila

A

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

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11
Q

Equine infectious anemia

A

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

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12
Q

Thrombocytopenia

A

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

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13
Q

Thrombocytopenia

A

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

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14
Q

Thrombocytopenia Dx

A

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

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15
Q

Tx of thrombocytopenia

A

Stop admin of all exogenous compounds, tx primary dz, corticosteroids, transfusion

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16
Q

DIC

A

Acquired dysfunction in coagulation secondary to severe systemic diseases
- Endotoxemia, sepsis, GIT dz
Pathophysiology: exaggerated activation of coagulation, microthrombi deposition (ischemic organ damage), consumption coagulopathy (hemorrhage)
Clinical forms: MODS or hemorrhagic form

17
Q

DIC Dx

A
No one test
Thrombocytopenia
Increased procoagulant activation
Consumptive coagulopathy (increased PT and APTT)
Decreased fibrinogen and antithrombin
Increased D dimers or FDPs
18
Q

DIC prognosis

A

Guarded to grave

Tx typically very expensive

19
Q

DIC Tx

A

Control underlying dz
Early recognition and treatment
Plasma transfusion and antithrombotics (Heparin)
Supportive care

20
Q

Vit K dificiency

A

Essential for hepatic synthesis of factors II, VII, IX, X
CS associated with decreased factor VII often seen first
Primary Vit K deficiency rare
Antagonism of vit k more common
- Warfarin, moldy sweet clover
Tx: Vit K1 SQ