Hematological III Flashcards
What is hemotasis
is a sequence/chain reaction of events leading to the cessation of bleeding bt formation of stable fibrin platelet plug
Formation of hemostasis (4)
- Vascular constriction
- formation of platelet plug (within mins)
- Formation of blood clot (occurs within mins to hours
- Tissue repair (occurs within days-weeks of initial impact)
What happens in step 1: vascular contraction/vascular wall injury
- Vessel contracts as result of initial injury
- Vasoconstriction causes blood flow turbulence and stasis
- this then causes release of thrombogenic factors release (thromboplastin, vWF)
- coagulation initiation
What happens in step 2: platelet phase of hemostasis (3 subphrases)
Endothelial cells begin platelet phase of clot formation
- Adhesion- vWF binds to CD42 receptor on surface of damaged enothelium (leading to adhesion of thrombocytes), adhesion causes platelets to degranulate
- activation- the release of alpha granules and dense bodies causes activation of the GP-3A receptor nd initiates binding of fibrinogen
- Aggregation- formation of platelet chain begins
What constitutes thrombocytopenia and thrombocytosis
Throbocytopenia- platelet count below 150 000
Thrombocytosis- platelet count above 400 000
what happens in step 3: formation of Blood clot
- activation of prothrombin (makes thrombin)
- Thrombin then acts on soluble form of fibrinogen into insoluble fibrin
- Fibrin allows proper formulation of blood clot which activates fibrinolytic system
- fibrinolytic system works to dissolve and reorganize clot
What is the intrinsic vs extrinsic clotting pathway
Instrincic pathway- surface contract (abnormalities within endothelial vessel lining occur as a result of turbulent flow)
Extrinsic pathway- Actual damage occurs- Physical damage over a vessel causing release of thrombus
What is the fibrinolytic system
Both the intrincic and extrincic path lead to common pathway which eventually leads to the formation of fibrin
Fibrin clot activates fibrinogen system which acctivates plasminogen and then plasmin which reorganizes clot
What are the different types of bleeding disorders (4)
- Due to vascular wall abnormalities
- Thrombocytopenias
- Thrombasthenias (defective platelets)
- Abnormalities in clotting factors (hemophilia etc)
Ex of vascular wall abnormalities
- Ehlers danlos
- Marfan syndrme
- Scurvy
- infextious and hypersensitive vasculidies
What is idiopathic thromocytoopenic purpura
type 2 hypersensitivity reaction against GPIIb-IIIa and GPIb-IX platelet antigens
what is thrombotic thrombocytopenia purport a def in
Def in ADAMTS13 enzyme
Causes clinical presentation of thrombocytopenia
What is heparin induced thrombocytopenia and pathogenesis
thrombocytopenia due to unfractionated heparin tx
-IgG antibodies bind PF4-herapin complex and cause platelets activation and thrombosis
What is the mc thrombotic condition
Hemolytic uremic syndrome (hamburger disease)
What is hemolytic ureic syndrome due to
Mc initial stage is gastro-enteritis w bloody diarrhea caused by E.Coli