Thrombosis: haemostasis in the wrong place Flashcards
What is the primary and secondary function of haemostasis?
- Primary haemostasis is aggregation of platelets.
- Secondary is conversion of fibrinogen into fibrin.
The surface of platelets is an important component of the process
Give an overview of the primary and secondary haemostasis in response to tissue damage
Primary = platelet ---> activated platelet Secondary = Fibrinogen ------> Fibrin
These lead to clotting
Describe how a clot is formed (3)
- Aggregation of platelets.
- Fibrinogen converted into fibrin mesh by thrombin which is a protease.
- Thrombin is itself converted from prothrombin which is the culmination of a cascade of similar activation steps.
What process reverses thrombosis?
Fibrinolysis
Describe how arterial and venous thrombosis are different
Arterial thrombosis
- Mostly result from atheroma rupture or damage to the endothelium (eg. MI, stroke).
- Platelet-rich ‘white’ thrombosis. Mostly primary.
- May block downstream arteries.
Venous thrombosis
- Often results from stasis or a hyper-coagulant state (eg DVT).
- Platelet-poor ‘red’ thrombus. Mostly secondary.
- May move to lungs.
How do cells maintain the correct balance of between thrombosis (coagulation) and fibrinolysis
- Endothelial cells express various factors, inhibiting coagulation:
Nitric Oxide - inhibits platelets
Antithrombin and Heparan - inhibits clotting
Prostaglandin I2, (inhibits platelets)
Tissue plasminogen activator - converts plasminogen to plasmin which converts a fibirin clot to a D-dimer by undergoing fibrinolysis
- If endothelial cells become damaged or inflamed they may favour coagulation, subendothelial cells if disturbed release tissue factor or Von Williebrand factor
What does Virchow’s triad consist of?
Stasis - Static blood lacks kinetic energy and tends to clot
Endothelial damage - eg. surgery or cannula
Hyper-coagulant state - eg. Infection/sepsis; genetic predisposition; drugs (eg. HRT)
What are the roles of valves inflow in veins?
What does contraction of veins cause?
What does blood tend to do around valves?
- Valves in veins prevent backflow of blood
- Contraction of nearby muscles squashes veins, acting as a pump to return blood to the heart
- Blood tends to eddy around valves increasing risk of stasis
What are the 4 fates of thrombosis?
- Resolution i.e thrombolysis
- Embolism i.e moves to another location and blocks vessels
- Organised i.e becomes covered by endothelium
- Recanalised and organised
Give an overview of proximal DVT
Higher risk of embolism and post-thrombotic syndrome (pain, swelling and ulcers) Occurs between the external iliac arteries and Popliteal vein
Give an overview distal DVT
Rarely caused by pulmonary embolism
Rarely cause post-thrombotic syndrome
Below the tibial vein
What is Post-thrombotic syndrome?
- Inflammation along with damage to the venous valves from the thrombus itself.
- Valvular incompetence combined with persistent venous obstruction inducing a rupture of small superficial veins, subcutaneous haemorrhage and an increase of tissue permeability.
- Pain, swelling, discoloration, and even ulceration follow.
What is the fate of venous thrombosis - lungs
If the clot goes back to the heart, it can be asymptomatic or death. It can pass through the heart and pass out to the lungs, it will then block a small vessel in the lungs. VQ mis-match – later in the lungs. A tiny area of the blood becomes starved and will then be degraded. It can be more serious and cause hypoxia. Sometimes can also block pulmonary arteries and cause death.
Describe the process of platelet adherence (3)
- Von Willebrand factor on subendothelial cells activates platelets.
- Circulating Von Willebrand factor may bind to exposed subendothelial cells
- Activated endothelial cells can also express von Willebrand factor
Describe the process of platelet activation (3)
- Activated platelets release Thromboxane A2 (TxA2) & Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) which induce receptors for fibrinogen (GPIIb/IIIa).
- These bind to receptors on adjacent platelets and increase expression of the glycoprotein complex GPIIb/IIIa.
- Platelets can also be activated by thrombin, collagen and many other mediators.