Haemostasis Flashcards
what different things are involved in normal blood flow and what is responsible for making sure blood maintains its liquid form?
Green cells responsible for making sure blood maintains liquid form
What happens when you cut yourself? :
- You bleed at the site of the injury
- For how long?
- Stops – you form a clot (what causes this?)
- The clot remains confined to the site of injury (how?)
- 1 week later the clot has vanished (how?)
Platelets, vWF, Coagulation Factors
Natural Anticoagulants
Fibrinolytic System
what is vWF?
von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a blood glycoprotein involved in hemostasis
VWF is an adhesive plasma glycoprotein which performs its haemostatic functions through binding to FVIII, to platelets surface glycoproteins, and to constituents of connective tissue. VWF acts as a stabilizer of FVIII in the circulation.
Big sticky molecule that you want when there is a clot
Binds to factor 8 which is needed for a clot
Different types of vWF disease
resting in blood vessles are:
- Platelets
- Coagulation factors
when do they become activated?
they become activated when the vessel wall is damaged
Platelets see an abnormal surface, has a receptor for the collagen, and binds to it
Also when you damage a blood vessel you release a small amount of physiological activator
when there is vessel damage, what happens to the platelets?
Platelets in the area of the damage have become activated and sticks
platelet adhesion
collagen indictaes abnormal surface
we release a small amount of tissue factor when there is damage and htis is the normal physiological activator which starts the coagulation casade so you can form a definitive clot
what is the surfcae of a platelet like?
Platelet has receptor for these things
The Glycoprotein bind to important ligands
Series of receptors for things that are released during trauma
what forms the primary and then definitive fibrin clot?
Platelet has stuck to the collagen holding the platelet in place
Also stuck to vWF
Binds fibrinogen on the top
Binds to collagen, bind to vWF, platelets bind to each other - forms primary clot
ONce the fibrinopeptides A and B are cleaved off, Fibrinogen forms the definitive fibrin clot
what is the role of platelets in haemostasis?
- Adhere (to abnormal surface)
- Activation (through variery of pathways)
- Aggregation
- Provide phospholipid surface for coagulation
when actiavted hwat do platelets adhere to?
collagen
vWF
how are platelets activated?
through multiple pathways
what causes the platelets to aggregate?
thromboxane
a hormone of the prostacyclin type released from blood platelets, which induces platelet aggregation and arterial constriction
what needs ot happen in a platelet to allow coagulation to happen?
Scramlase allows phospholipid to be expressed on the outside surface of the platelet
Phospholipid helps coagulation as some of the reactions are phospholipid dependent
Phospholipid normally on the internal membrane of the platelet so this allows it to be expressed on the external surface
how is the Primary Haemostatic (Platelet) Plug formed?
30 seconds – 1 minute after a cut
Platelets become activated, stuck to collagen, stuck to vWF, changed conformation and now bound fibrinogen
If you have a platelet plug you need a fibrin plug otherwise you will bleed
Need to cleave the fibrinogen
what clots is the one htat stops the bleeding?
Definitive Haemostasis: Fibrin formation
what is haemophilia?
Haemophilia is a mostly inherited genetic disorder that impairs the body’s ability to make blood clots, a process needed to stop bleeding. This results in people bleeding for a longer time after an injury, easy bruising, and an increased risk of bleeding inside joints or the brain.