Lecture 12: coagulation in the lab + bleeding disorders Flashcards

1
Q

APPT test measure the?

A

INTRINSIC PATHWAY

  • Starts with the contact factors that aren’t normally used in the body but if they are triggered then they can cause a clot
  • Activation of XII then activates XI and then IX through to VIII and V before prothrombin is converted to thrombin
  • Doesn’t require VII or TF
  • APPT is thus prolonged by XI, IX and VIII all causing clotting disorders (XII will prolonge but not cause disorder)
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2
Q

How is APPT performed?

A
  • Venous blood sample collected into citrate that stops clotting by soaking up all the calcium
  • It is spun down to collect plasma
  • Add phospholipid and an activator to activate XII
  • Add calcium and time length for clot formation.
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3
Q

Prothrombin time? Looks for deficiencies in? Ratio?

A

Uses the extrinsic pathway

You add a lot of TF so that the intrinsic pathway is bypassed and rather it just produces thrombin from TF converting X -> Xa and Xa converting prothrombin to thrombin with V as its cofactor.

  • Looks at deficiencies in factor VII, X and V as well as prothrombin and fibrinogen
  • Doesn’t look for VIII or IX and so you may have a severe clotting disorder from a deficiency in one of these but have a normal Prothrombin time
  • PR : prothrombin ratio looks at the time compared to 20 or so normal people using the exact same equipment
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4
Q

Thrombin Clotting time?

A

Used to measure fibrinogen and looks at the inhibitors of it such as: Heparin and dibigatran

Adding a variable quantity of thrombin to plasma and looking at time. If you however, just add a small amount then you can look at the effect of the inhibitors

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5
Q

Mixing studies?

A

1:1 mixing with normal plasma + incubation-(looks for rare factors)

  • sample corrects to normal and remains normal = factor deficiency (APPT only needs 30-40%)
  • If sample doesn’t fully correct then an inhibitor must be present
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6
Q

Inhibitors in lab coagulation tests? Prolonged APTT 1+1?

A

Lupus anticoagulant

  • antibody mediated - doesn’t cause bleeding just increases APTT
  • Binds phospholipid and in a lab this causes increased time

Heparin

  • confirmed by the addition of protamine (binds and reverses effects)
  • upregulates antithrombin by a LARGE amount
  • commonly used to ‘lock’ central lines - contamination common
  • thrombin clotting time increased

Dibigatran

  • Used to treat AF and directly binds thrombin and increased APTT and 1+1
  • Thrombin clotting time increased
  • Protamine does nothing

Aquired factor inhibitor (Rare)

  • autoimmune antibodies usually against VIII
  • Increase bleeding and bruising (can be life threatening)
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7
Q

Interpretation of Prolonged APTT with normal PT?

Interpretation of Prolonged PT with normal APTT?

BOTH prolonged?

A

APTT prolonged with normal PT:

  • Factor deficiency in VIII, IX, XI, XII (intrinsic)
  • XII is asymptomatic and XI is mild
  • VIII and IX are more serious

Prolonged PT with normal APTT

  • Deficiency of Factor VII (extrinsic)
  • occasionally mild deficiency of II, V, X and I

Both

  • Multiple factor deficiency
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8
Q

Common scenarios resulting from multiple factor deficiencies?

A
  • Warfarin or Vitamin L deficiency (II, VII, IX, X)
  • Mssive blood loss: loss of coagulation factors and dilution with fluids
  • Disseminated Intravascular coagulation (DIC)
    • widespread activation of coagulation causing thrombosis followed by bleeding as clotting factors and platelets used up. Low fibrinogen often seen.
  • Liver disease: lack of production of factors and inhibitors (except VIII made by endothelial cells)
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9
Q

Prolonged PT DD?

A

EXTTRINSIC and COMMON pathways

  • Warfarin (low II, VII, IX, X)
  • Vitamin K def
  • Liver disease
  • Low factor VII (APTT would be normal)
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10
Q

How does Warfarin work?

A

Inhibits recycling of Vitamin K leading to a lack of carboxylating factors (II, VII, IX and X)

Dose adjustments need to be made by monitoring the INR

Reversed by vitamin K (or more rapidly by replacing clotting factors)

Used in AF, venous thromboembolism and other thrombotic disorders

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11
Q

23 y/o man knocked off his bike

APPT and PR high with LOW fibrinogen?

A

Consumptive coagulopathy = DIC

We make sure that we give a unit of plasma with each unit of blood to stop this from happening

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12
Q

Haemophilia?

A

Severe disease - X linked

  • spontaneous joint bleeds lead to chronic arthropathy, joint destruction, deformity and arthritis
  • soft tissue bleeds lead to tissue and nerve damage as wekk as deformity
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13
Q

Haemophilia A? B? Treatment?

A

A = Factor VIII deficiency - most common heriditary disease with serious bleeding (1 in 5000 men) - mild, moderate and severe

B = Factor IX deficiency - 1 in 30000 with identical clinical features to Haemophilia A

We can give recombinant missing factors - and give propylaxis in children and teenagers

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14
Q

Von Willebrand Factor?

A

Plasma glycoprotein synthesised in megakaryocytes and endothelial cells - promotes platelet adhesion at vessel wall.

Serves as a carrier for factor VIII

  • Deficiency leads to platelets not binding and can lead to lack of VIII
  • Bleeding disorder in 1-3% of population of varying amounts - not everyones APTT is prolonged
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