Platelets Flashcards

1
Q

Platelets

A

Initial hemostatic plug
Temporary

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2
Q

Coagulation proteins

A

Reinforce the platelet framework and part of definitive hemostatic plug

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3
Q

What is the precursor cell to platelets

A

Megakaryocyte, cytoplasmic fragments

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4
Q

How are platelets released in blood

A

Megakaryocyte in bone marrow and reach out branches into the blood vessel and the sheer flow of blood will cause portions of the cytoplasm to break off

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5
Q

Platelet regulation

A

Thrombopoietin from the liver at a constant rate and removed from blood by circulating platelets. If platelet mass reduces there is an increase in TPO concentration resulting in increased production. Inflammatory cytokines also increase production

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6
Q

Thrombopathia

A

Qualitative disorder of platelets

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7
Q

Extrinsic platelet disorder

A

Platelets are normal but there is some other part of the way the platelets work is not. IE von Willebrand factor missing

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8
Q

Intrinsic platelet disorder

A

Platelets are abnormal

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9
Q

4 categories of platelet disorders

A
  1. Congenital for abnormal conc
  2. Acquired causes for abnormal conc, most common
  3. Congenital functional defect
  4. Acquired functional defect
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10
Q

Platelet type bleeding from thrombocytopenia or thrombopathia

A

Bleeding from mucosal surfaces including: epistaxis, gingival, UT, and GI bleeding. See petechial or ecchymotic hemorrhage on any skin or mucosal surface

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11
Q

At what point can you get spontaneous bleeding due to low platelet conc?

A

<50,000platelets/ul

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12
Q

Mean platelet volume

A

MPV from automated platelet concentration.
Average size of circulating platelets

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13
Q

High MPV with thrombocytopenia

A

Megakaryocytes are trying to respond to low platelet numbers. Not you and will stay that big. Good sign

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14
Q

Low MPV with thrombocytopenia

A

May indicate insufficient number of megakaryocyte present or failure to response

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15
Q

Normal MPV in thrombocytopenia

A

Megakaryocytes not responding or it is too early for response

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16
Q

When do we test platelet function

A

When the concentration is adequate but have platelet type bleed

17
Q

Buccal mucosal bleeding time

A

Indicate primary hemostasis or platelet status. Only use on pt with adequate platelet concentrations. Can’t be used to detect coagulopathies

18
Q

Clot retraction

A

Test platelet function and do not do on pt with medications that affect clotting. Tests to see if blood mixed with thrombin will form a clot retraction. Always do duplicates and with control

19
Q

Platelet aggregometry

A

Gold standard. Highly specialized and not readily available and must be completed quickly

20
Q

Cats and platelets

A

-Tend to be more clumped (reactive)
-Variable size
-See more giant platelets
-Do not use impedance hematology analyzers
-Often have no clinical signs of thrombocytopenia

21
Q

Inherited macrothrombocytopenia signalment

A

Cavalier King Charles are poster child

22
Q

Inherited macrothrombocytopenia

A

Low number but larger so there is no clinical bleeding

23
Q

Immune mediated thrombocytopenia

A

Circulating platelets or megakaryocytes destroyed by immune mediated mechanism

24
Q

Causes of ItP

A
  1. Primary or autoimmune
  2. Secondary to immune complex absorption or neoantigen expression
  3. Incompatible transfusion
25
Q

Rickettsial induced thrombocytopenia

A

-Erlichia canis
-Anaplasma platys and phagocytum
-Rickettsia rickettsia
Have immune mediated clearance and decreased lifespan as well as vasculitis induced consumption

26
Q

Drug induced thrombocytopenia

A

-Primary-> destroyed by drug interaction
-Secondary immune mediated-> drug dependent (if you stop drug and stops reaction to platelets) or independent
-Secondary bone marrow suppression

27
Q

DIC

A

Pathologic process characterized by widespread activation of clotting cascade and get clots throughout body and use up all the platelets. See if there is massive tissue damage

28
Q

Destruction or crowding of marrow cavity thrombocytopenia

A

Inflammatory disease
Myeloproliferative disease
Myelopthsis/myelofibrosis

29
Q

Von Willebrand disease

A

Most common congenital extrinsic platelet function disorder in dogs. Decreased VW factor reduces platelet adhesion

30
Q

Diagnosis of von Willebrand

A

ELISA to determine antigen levels using plasma not serum
Clot retraction and APTT is normal

31
Q

Diagnosis of von Willebrand

A

ELISA to determine antigen levels using plasma not serum (EDTA or citrated plasma)
DNA test is available
Clot retraction and APTT is normal

32
Q

Glanzmann Thrombasthenia

A

Congenital intrinsic platelet dysfunction. No clot retractions. Defect in GpIIb-IIIa so abnormal fibrinogen binding and unable to aggregate platelets

33
Q

CalDAG-GEFI Thrombopathia

A

Congenital intrinsic platelet dysfunction. Abnormal signal transduction so decreased binding of platelets to fibrinogen. Normal clot retraction

34
Q

Acquired Qualitative Platelet Function disorders

A

-FeLV
-Drug induced (TXA2)