Haem 1 - Haemostasis and Thrombosis Flashcards
What makes the vessel wall normally antithrombotic
o Expresses anticoagulant molecules Thrombomodulin Endothelial protein C receptor Tissue factor pathway inhibitor Heparans
o Does not express tissue factor
TF/FVIIa –> Primary cellular initiator of blood coagulation
Found in the subendothelial tissue
o Secretes antiplatelet factors
Prostacyclin
NO
what happens when blood vessels are injured
• Inflammation/injury makes the vessel wall prothrombotic activates endothelial cells and neutrophils
o Effects
Anticoagulant molecules (e.g. TM) are down-regulated
TF may be expressed (pot-coagulant molecule)
Prostacyclin production decreased
Adhesion molecules upregulated
VWF release
• Platelet and neutrophil capture
• Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETS) form
o Neutrophils can undergo netosis under inflammatory stimuli they release the contents of their nucleus (DNA) – this captures things like vwf, releases things like histones (activate platelets), provides a surface for contact activation of the coagulation pathways, contains things like neutrophil elastase will break down TFPI
Where does each anticoagulant factor act
TFPI (tissue factor pathway inhibitor)
Protein C + S
Antithrombin
TFPI
inhibits FXa + TF/FVIIa (10, 7)
Protein C+S regulate/inactivate Va, VIIIa (5,8)
Antithombin inhibits Xa, IIa (thrombin) (10,2)
https://www.tekportal.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/thromboplastin.png
List the anticoagulant factors deficiencies from highest to lowest risk of thrombosis
Antithrombin Deficiency
Protein C deficiency
Protein S deficiency
Factor V Leiden
VTE risk assessment
patient
procedure
VTE risk assessment Patient • Age >60 • Previous VTE • Active cancer • Acute or chronic lung disease • Chorinc HF • Lower limb paralysis (excluding acute CVA) • Acute infection • BMI >30
Procedure • Hip or knee replacement • Hip fracture • Other major orthopaedic surgery • Surgery >30 mins • Plaster cast immobilisation of lower limb
Bleeding risk assessment
patient
procedure
Bleeding risk assessment Patient • Bleeding diathesis (e.g. haemophilia, VWD) • Platelets <100 • Acute CVA in previous month • SBP >200 or DBP >120 • Severe liver disease • Severe renal disease • Active bleeding • Anticoagulation of anti-platelet therapy
Procedure
• Neuro, spinal or eye surgery
• Other with high bleeding risk
• LP/spinal/epidural in previous 4 hours
Immediate anticoagulant therapy options
• Immediate
o Heparin
UFH IV, monitored (APPT/ antiXa) - t1/2 1-2h
LMWH SC, no monitoring - t1/2 - 6h
Pentasaccharide SC, no monitoring
Reversal - protamine
All act by potentiating antithrombin – heparin directly activates antithrombin in the circulation
Activation of antithrombin (III) = inactivation of thrombin (II) + FXa
o DOAC – Direct acting anti-Xa and anti-IIa – direct enzyme inhibition
Anti-Xa – Rivaroxaban, apixaban, edoxaban
Anti-IIa – diabigatran
Properties – oral administration, immediate acting (peak in 3-4h), short half-life, no monitoring, also useful in long-term
t/12 - 8-10h
Delayed anticoagulant therapy options
o Warfarin (vitamin K antagonist) Indirect effect – prevents recycling of vitamin K => delayed onset of action t1/2= 2-3d
• Determined by the half life of the coagulation factors in the blood and not be the amount of vitamin K
Levels of procoagulant factors II, VII, IX, X 2, 7, 9, 10 fall – delayed reduction in coagulation factors
Levels of anticoagulant protein C + protein S also fall
• Reduction in procoagulant factors > reduction in anticoagulant factors
Monitoring warfarin
• Always essential
o Measure of effect is INR (derived from PTT)
reversal factor concentrates, vitamin K
teratogenic
Normal INR vs target on warfarin
Normal - 1
Target on warfarin 2.5 (2-3)
Rate of reduction in coagulation factors after warfarin therapy starting with the factor that is decreases the fastest
7>9>10>2
risk of recurrence
Which group of people are at higher risk
idiopathic
non-surgical risk (e.g. COCP, flight)
surgery
men
women
proximal
PE
distal
- idiopathic > non-surgical risk (e.g. COCP, flight) > surgery
- men>women
- proximal>PE>distal
Proximal thrombosis = thrombus from the popliteal vein and above – higher rates of recurrence than the distal veins (e.g. calf vein)
Long term anticoagulation duration if VTE
after surgery
idiopathic
after precipitants
after surgery - no need idiopathic - long term (esp. w DOAC) after precipitants (usually 3 months adequate, longer duration if other thrombotic/haemorrhagic RF)