Pathoma - Hemostasis and Related Disorders Flashcards
What are the steps of primary hemostasis
(1) Transient vasoconstriction of damaged vessel; mediated by reflex neural stimulation and endothelin release
(2) Platelet adhesion; vWF (from Weibel-Palade bodies and alpha-granules of platelets) binds to exposed collagen; platelets bind vWF via GPIb
(3) Platelet degranulation; adhesion leads to platelet shape change which causes degranulation; ADP released from dense granules which promotes exposure of GP2b/3a receptor on platelets; TXA2 synthesized by platelet COX and released, which calls in other platelets
(4) Platelet aggregation; platelets bind to each other via GP2b3a using fibrinogen as a linking molecule
What is the cause of Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)
Autoimmune production of IgG against platelet antigens (e.g. GP2a3b); spleen produces the antibody and also produces macrophages to consume the antibody-bound platelets
What is microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and what are the 2 types
Pathologic formation of platelet microthrombi in small vessels which leads to shearing of RBCs
Seen in thrombotic thromocytopenic purpura (TTP) and hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)
What is the cause of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
Due to decreased ADAMTS13 (usually autoantibody against ADAMTS13)
ADAMTS13 is what degrades vWF, so if vWF cannot be degraded it accumulates and causes continued platelet adhesion
What is the cause of hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)
Caused by endothelial damage due to drugs or infection; usually E. Coli O157:H7 verotoxin causing endothelial damage
Genetic deficiency of GPIb is called ___?
Bernard-Soulier syndrome
Genetic GPIb deficiency - impaired platelet adhesion
Will show enlarged platelets on blood smear (“big suckers”) because bone marrow is producing immature platelets
Genetic deficiency of GP2b3a is called ___?
Glanzmann thrombasthenia
Genetic GP2b3a deficiency - impaired platelet aggregation
How does Aspirin affect platelet function
Aspirin inactivates COX, so TXA2 cannot be created. TXA2 is needed for platelet aggregation (it is released by platelets to call in other platelets)
What are the coag factors involved in the extrinsic, intrinsic, and common pathways
Intrinsic pathway:
Subendothelial collagen - XII - XI - IX + VIII - X
Extrinsic pathway:
Tissue thromboplastin - VII - X
Common pathway:
X + V converts II (prothrombin) to IIa (thrombin)
Thrombin then converts fibronogen (I) to fibrin (Ia)
Fibrin + XIII leads to cross-linked fibrin clot
Which pathways do PTT and PT measure
PTT - intrinsic pathway (more #s involved)
PT - extrinsic pathway
What is the mechanism of action of Heparin and which lab value is used to measure its effects (PT or PTT)
Heparin binds to Anti-thrombin III, which is responsible for inactivating thrombin and coag factors
PTT
What is the mechanism of action of Coumadin (aka Warfarin) and which lab value is used to measure its effects (PT or PTT)
Coumadin blocks epoxide reductase in the liver, which is responsible for activating Vitamin K, which is necessary for gamma-carboxylating of factors 2, 7, 9, 10, C, and S
What is the deficiency in Hemophilia A
Factor VIII
What is the deficiency in Hemophilia B (Christmas Disease)
Factor IX
How do you differentiate between Hemophilia A and antibody against factor VIII
Hemophilia A will have a corrected PTT if patient’s plasma is mixed with normal plasma