Platelet BioChemistry Flashcards

1
Q

What is Thrombosis?

A
  • Formation of clot (thrombus) inside blood vessel
  • Platelets have a central role in arterial thrombosis
    Heart attack (myocardial infarction)
    Stroke
    Sudden death
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2
Q

Explain Platelet Shape Change?

A

Activation leads to Shape change
Smooth discoid leads to spiculated + pseudopodia
Increases surface area
Increases possibility of cell-cell interactions

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3
Q

What is Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (GPIIb/IIIa) receptor?

A
  • On surface of platelet
    50,000 to 100,000 copies on resting platelet
  • Platelet activation
    Increases number of receptors
    Increases affinity of receptor for fibrinogen
    Fibrinogen links receptors, binding platelets together (platelet aggregation)

Also known as integrin aIIbb3

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4
Q

What is platelet aggregation?

A

Mediated by GPIIb/IIIa activation (final common pathway)
Cross linking of platelets by fibrinogen

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5
Q

What is Platelet Adhesion?

A

Collagen and VWF exposed when endothelial layer damaged
Platelet adhesion mediated by GPIb, 21 and GPVI

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6
Q

What are platelet granules?

A

Mediators of vessel response to injury
Inflammatory mediators released from a granules

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7
Q

Summarise amplification pathways and inhibitors?

A

Thromboxane A2 – Aspirin
P2Y12 receptors – Clopidogrel, Prasugrel, Ticagrelor

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8
Q

What is Hemostasis?

A

Blood loss prevention

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9
Q

How is a platelet plug formed? (First Step)

A

Endothelial Injury

  • Nerves/Smooth muscle cells detect an injury and trigger reflexive contractions of vessels.
  • This causes a decrease in blood flow.
  • Also nitric oxide is secreted and prostaglandis stops.
  • Secretion of endothelin begins and contractions continue.
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10
Q

What is the second step of platelet plug formation?

A

Exposure

  • Damage to endothelial cells exposes collagen
  • Damaged cells release Von Willebrand factor (binds to collagen)
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11
Q

What is the third step of platelet plug formation?

A

Adhesion

  • GP1B surface proteins on platelets bind to Von Willebrand Factor
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12
Q

What is the fourth step of platelet plug formation?

A

Activation

  • Platelet changes shape (forms arms to grab other platelets)
  • Releases more Von Willebrand factor, Serotonin, Calcium, ADP, Thromboxane A2 result in GPIIB/IIIA expression
  • ADP, Thromboxane A2 results in GPIIB/IIIA expression
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13
Q

What is the last step of platelet plug formation?

A

Aggregation

  • GPIIB/IIIA binds to fibrinogen, links platelets
    Causing the formation of a Platelet Plug
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14
Q

What is the extrinsic pathway?

A
  • Trauma damages blood vessels, exposes cells under endothelial layer
  • Tissue factor (factor III) embedded in membrane
  • Factor VII in blood binds to tissue factor,
    Caclcium leads to VIIa - TF complex
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15
Q

What happens in the Intrinsic Pathway?

A
  • Circulating factor XII contacts negatively charged phosphates on platelets/subendothelial collagen leading to Factor XIIa
  • Factor XIIa cleaves Factor XI leading to Factor XIIa
  • Factor XIa + Calcium cleaves Factor IX leading to Factor IXa
  • Factor IXa + Factor VIIIa (binds to Von Willebrand factor) + Calcium, enter the common pathway
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16
Q

What happens in the Common Pathway?

A
  • Factor X is cleaved - Factor Xa
  • Factor Xa cleaves factor V - Factor Va
  • Factor Xa + Factor Va + Calcium - Prothrombinase Complex
  • Prothrombin (factor II) - thrombin (factor IIa)
  • Thrombin activates platelets, cofactors (V,VIII,IX), cleaves fibrinigen, stabilising factor (factor XIIIa + calcium, cross-links in mesh)
17
Q

What Coagulation Tests are used?

A
  • Prothrombin Time (PT): Tests extrinsic pathway
  • Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (aPTT): Tests Intrinsic Pathway
18
Q

How does Vitamin K regulate Blood Coagulation?

A

Converts Coagulation factors into mature forms

19
Q

How does Vitamin K regulate Blood Coagulation?

A

Converts Coagulation factors into mature forms