Chapter 7: Bleeding and Hemostasis Flashcards

1
Q

What are three naturally occurring anticoagulants?

A
  • Antithrombin (activated x1000 by heparin)
  • Activated protein C
  • Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (increased by heparin)
    AAT
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2
Q

Normal endothelium controls platelet reactivity through what 3 known inhibitors?

A

Prostacyclin (PGI2) -> limits platelet response to thromboxane-A2
Ecto-ADPase
Nitric Oxide (decreases IC calcium flux, reducing receptors and affinity of fibrinogen binding sites)

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3
Q

What is the life span of a platelet?

A

6-8 days

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4
Q

Activated platelets release secondary agonists – notably which two?

A

Thromboxane A2
adenosine diphosphase (ADP)

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5
Q

Secondary platelet agonist binding does what to platelets at the end of the primary haemostasis?

A

Agonist binding exposes binding domains for fibrinogen – binding results in interplatelet cohesion and aggregation.

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6
Q

The extrinsic pathway is initiated by what?
Intrinsic?

A

Extrinsic pathway – initiated by tissue factor (Factor 3)
Intrinsic: Contact activation of Factor 12

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7
Q

What are the two main “paradigm shifts” when referring to the cell-based model of coagulation?

A

That tissue factor is the primary physiologic initiator of coagulation
That coagulation is localized to and controlled by cellular surfaces

There are three overlapping phases: initiation, amplification, and propagation.

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8
Q

What are the three overlapping phases of the cell-based coagulation model?

A

Initiation (on TF bearing cells)
Amplification
Propagation (on platelets)

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9
Q

PT prolongation means what?

A

defective extrinsic and / or common pathway

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10
Q

APTT prolongation means what?

A

defective intrinsic and /or common pathway

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11
Q

Isolated coagulation factor deficiency generally does not occur until that factor is decreased to less than what % of normal?

A

25-30%

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12
Q

What are three described methods of platelet function testing in dogs/cats? (3)

A

Platelet aggregometry
platelet function analyzer (PFA-100)
flow cytometry

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13
Q

What is the normal BMBT for a dog?
For a sedated cat?

A

dog < 3 mins
cat 34-105 seconds

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14
Q

Prolonged BMBT could mean what? (3)

A

Thrombocytopenia
Thrombopathia
Vasculopathy

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15
Q

What can influence BMBT?

A

age, skin temp, device used, hct%, blood viscosity, skin thickness, sex, person doing test

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16
Q

what is ACT in terms of clotting test?
Contents of tube act as an activator of what factor?
is it more or less sensitive to intrinsic and common pathway defects than APTT

A

Activated clotting time
factor 12 (intrinsic pathway)
Less sensitive

(Influenced by variables such as severe thrombocytopenia, thrombopathia, anemia, altered viscosity and incubation temperature)

17
Q

Fibrin split products are produced when?

A

Plasmin lyses fibrinogen

18
Q

What is the most common primary hemostatic defect?

A

Thrombocytopenia

19
Q

What is the most common cause of platelet counts <50k?

A

IMTP

20
Q

What are the three types of von Willebrands?

A

Type 1: All multimers of vWF but reduced concentration (<20% normal = severely affected)
Type 2: Disproportionate decrease or absence of the high-molecular weight multimers - causes severe bleeds, DDAVP can’t help (the big boys are just not there to be released)
Type 3: Almost complete absence of vWF (<1%) often severe bleeds before 1yr of age)

21
Q

vWF levels below what % on ELISA are confirmatory(“deficient”) for diagnosis of von Willebrands?

A

<50% is deficient

22
Q

How long does it take for cryoprecipitate to have an effect and how long does it last?

A

Takes 30 min, lasts 4 hours

23
Q

Desmopressin (DDDAVP) is useful for which type of vWD? Is it helpful for clotting an an animal that doesn’t have vWD?

A

Type 1
No, it doesn’t help a normal dog

24
Q

What test is most diagnostic for a thromboembolism?

A

Selective pulmonary angiography

D-dimers are sensitive so if normal/<250ng/mL can rule PTE out but not specific so can’t diagnose on that alone.

25
Q

Describe the disease course of DIC:
Are these patients clinically hyper or hypo-coagulable?
What is mortality?
What natural anticoagulant pathway is affected?

A

Systemic activation of coagulation -> microvascular thrombosis -> compromise of organ perfusion -> organ failure
Ongoing exhaustion of platelets and factors = hypocoagulable state
50-77% mortality in dogs, 93% in cats
Protein C pathway is profoundly decreased

26
Q

Platelets make what via COX-1 from arachidonic acid?

A

Thromboxane A2

27
Q

What are the two receptors that platelets bind to become activated?

A

Platelet glycoprotein VI receptor on exposed collagen
or
vWF via the 2whglycoprotein 1b (GPIba) receptor

28
Q

What is the most important activator of platelets?

A

Thrombin (Factor II)