OnlineMedEd: Hematology Oncology - "Thrombophilia" Flashcards
What do proteins C and S do?
- Protein S activates protein C
* Protein C deactivates factor Va
Explain the pathway of factors I, II, III, V, and X.
1) Factor Xa (activated by the extrinsic –VIIa –and intrinsic –IXa – pathways) activates factor II using Va as a cofactor.
2) Factor IIa converts I to Ia (better known as fibrinogen and fibrin).
3) Factor Ia makes clots.
4) Factor IIIa (antithrombin) deactivates IIa and Xa.
5) Factor Va is deactivated by proteins S and C.
Review the pathophysiology of factor V Leiden.
Factor Va is mutated so that it doesn’t respond to protein C. Thus, it remains activated and continues to allow Xa to activate II, leading to excess clotting.
What mutation leads to prothrombin mutation?
Prothrombin 20210A
This leads to IIa that does not deactivate as easily.
________________ are rarer but more potent thrombophilias than prothrombin and factor V Leiden mutations.
Protein C, protein S, and antithrombin deficiencies
Explain the relative risk of thromboembolism from factor V Leiden, surgery, and cancer.
- Surgery or trauma: 10x RR
- Cancer: 20x RR
- Factor V Leiden: 1.5x
Describe the classic pattern of clotting seen in antiphospholipid antibody syndrome.
Arterial and venous clots
Why is APS a special diagnosis in the realm of thrombophilias?
With all of the thrombophilias, you wait until the person has a second unprovoked clot to treat with warfarin/LMWH. With APS, you treat after the first one if it is diagnosed (which you would suspect in a person with SLE who has clots).
How is APS diagnosed?
Russell viper venome test