Purpura Flashcards
Definition
Bleeding into skin. Characteristically the lesion is flat, non blanchable by pressure and changes colour from red to purple to greenish-yellow.
•Petechiae are lesions less than 2 mm;
•Purpura are lesions between 2 – 5 mm
•Ecchymosis are above 5mm in diameter
Age of skin bleeding: •red – day 1 •purple – day 1-3 •green-yellow – day 7-10 •yellow brown – day 8 or more •pink > 2 weeks
Causes of bleeding into skin
1. Vascular causes: •Syndromes: Ehler Danlo’s, Marfan’s •Strangulation •Metabolic: Steroid, scurvy, uraemia •Vasculitis: SLE, HSP •Septicaemia- viral, meningococcal •Drugs
- Thrombocytopenia
• Decrease production
••Leukaemia
••Aplastic anaemia – primary and secondary
••Marrow infiltration – Lymphoma, Histiocytosis
••Osteropetrosis
••Megaloblastic anaemia
- Increased destruction
- •Immune-mediated: ITP, Autoimmune diseases
- •Non-immune related –
- ••Infection – viral
- ••Drug – Sulphonamide, carbimazole, rifampicin
- ••Hypersplenism
- ••DIC, HUS
- ••Kassabach- Meritt’s syndrome
- Platelet dysfunction
Primary
• Von Willibrand’s disease : No ristocetin Rx
• Thrombasthenia: positiveristocetin Rx
Secondary
• Drugs: Aspirin, penicillin, S-drugs and herbs
• Liver or Renal failure
• Scurvy
4. Coagulation defect Hereditary: 1. Vascular causes: • Syndromes: Ehler Danlo’s, Marfan’s • Strangulation • Metabolic: Steroid, scurvy, uraemia • Vasculitis: SLE, HSP • Septicaemia- viral, meningococcal • Drugs
- Thrombocytopenia
• Decrease production
•• Leukaemia
•• Aplastic anaemia – primary and secondary
•• Marrow infiltration – Lymphoma, Histiocytosis
•• Osteropetrosis
•• Megaloblastic anaemia
- Increased destruction
- • Immune-mediated: ITP, Autoimmune diseases
- • Non-immune related –
- •• Infection – viral
- •• Drug – Sulphonamide, carbimazole, rifampicin
- •• Hypersplenism
- •• DIC, HUS
- •• Kassabach- Meritt’s syndrome
- Platelet dysfunction
Primary
• Von Willibrand’s disease : No ristocetin Rx
• Thrombasthenia: positiveristocetin Rx
Secondary
• Drugs: Aspirin, penicillin, S-drugs and herbs
• Liver or Renal failure
• Scurvy
- Coagulation defect
Hereditary:
• Haemophilia, Christmas/ VWD
• Other hereditary clotting factor defect; either quantitative or qualitative
Acquired: • Liver failure • Vit K deficiency • Massive transfusion • DIC
Steps in examination of bleeding into skin
- Confirm purpura by its character
- Note the extent of distribution:
• Generalised vs local bleeding, esp bleeding into joint = coagulation defect
• Mucosal bleeding
3. Look for pallor, fever • Sore throat, mucosal ulcer (infection) • LN enlargements (leukaemia etc) • Sternal tenderness • Pseudoparalysis of limbs
- Abdo examination
NB.
• Raised purpuric rash of LL & buttock distribution = HSP
• Factor XII deficiency - abn aPTT but no clinical disease
• Factor XIII deficiency - normal blood tests but with clinical bleeding