Chapter 18: Surgical Hemostasis Flashcards

1
Q

How long can the abdominal aorta be ligated for?

A

30 mins

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2
Q

How long can the Portal triad (Pringle) be ligated for?

A

10-15 mins

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3
Q

How long can the Hepatic artery be ligated for?

A

30 mins

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4
Q

How long can the splenic artery and vein be ligated for?

A

15-20 mins

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5
Q

How long can the renal artery and vein be ligated for?

A

30 mins

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6
Q

Tourniquets over what pressure can cause demyelination?

A

> 1000mmHg - causing compression of nerves causing neurological deficits for up to 6 months postop

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7
Q

Tourniquet max time is?

A

1.5 - 2 hours due to ATP depletion

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8
Q

Two recommendations for applying a touniquet?

A

Use the widest one you can
Elevate the limb before application to help exsanguinate leg.

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9
Q

Exsanguination of the limb prior to tourniquet or with Esmarch is not recommended in what 2 circumstances?

A

Infection and/or neoplasia

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10
Q

What can reduce the risk of ischemic damage when using a tourniquet?

A

hypothermia

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11
Q

What are the three groups of hemostatic agents?

A

Mechanical agents, active agents and hemostatic sealants

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12
Q

What are possible complications of hemostatic agents?

A

volumetric swelling
exothermic reaction
foreign body reaction
inhibition of normal tissue healing
immunogenic reaction

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13
Q

When should hemostatic agents not be used?

A

in intravascular spaces
when blood salvage procedures are being used (autotransfusion - can get through the 40um filters)

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14
Q

How do mechanical hemostatic agents work?

A

Swell in response to bleeding and can be a matrix for clot to form on - rely on normal clotting

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15
Q

Do mechanical hemostatic agents inhibit healing?

A

They inhibit the healing of tissue edges of skin

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16
Q

Gelatin combined with what is more effective than gelatin on its own?

A

Thrombin

17
Q

Which one collagen or gelatin actively promotes platelet aggregation?

A

Collagen
gelatin does not

18
Q

How does gelatin reabsorb?

A

Via granulomatous inflammation with ingrowth of fibroblasts developing rapidly following placement of the sponge

19
Q

How long in experimental studies do gelatin sponges take to absorb?

A

5 weeks

20
Q

How can you tell if a gelatin sponge is what you see on advanced imaging or if it is a tumor?

A

Small little pockets of air in the foam

21
Q

Bovine collagen is what type of collagen? How long does it stay there and how is it removed?

A

Type 2
8-10 weeks and is absorbed by fibroblast remodeling

22
Q

what is the name of the cellulose used as a hemostatic agent?

A

Oxidised regenerative cellulose (ORC)
- unknown mechanism
- appears to form a large gelatinous clot
- works independently from coagulation pathway
- acidic properties may cause denaturing of blood proteins

23
Q

Why might cellulose be a less effective hemostatic agent than others?

A

The acidic environment inactivates thrombin

24
Q

Is cellulose bactericidal?

A

Yes
Against Gram - and Gram + aerobes and anaerobes

25
Q

How long does resorption of cellulose take?

A

2-6 weeks

26
Q

Name 3 mechanical hemostatic agents that are not gelatin/collagen or cellulose?

A

bone wax
ostene
polysaccharide spheres - dehydrate the blood

27
Q

Alginates cannot be used in which environments and why?

A

In body cavities - they cause foreign body reactions

28
Q

How does thrombin work?

A

Actively converts fibrinogen in blood to fibrin to create a clot (It’s Factor II)

29
Q

Fibrin is what type of hemostatic agent?

A

Active - works independently from the patients own clotting pathway - derived from pooled human plasma

30
Q

What is a concern with synthetic sealants?
How long to absorb?

A

They swell up to 400% - need to be used with caution next to vital structures
4-8 weeks

31
Q

Antifibrinolytics are either lysine (EACA, tranexamic acid) or serine (aprotinin) protease inhibitors - which one is more potent and why?

A

Lysine is more potent as it binds more strongly to the plasminogen molecule

32
Q

How does tranexamic acid work?

A

thrombin time prolonged and stabilizes clot - does not affect platelet number or normal coagulation times

33
Q

Desmopressin is what? how does it work?

A

A synthetic analogue of arginine vasopressin that stimulates the release of factor 8 and vWF from endothelial cells

34
Q

What are the main side effects of desmopressin?

A

antidiuretic effect causing hyponatremia and water retention

35
Q

Ethamsylate improves what?

A

platelet adhesiveness and aggregation in the presence of vascular injury
- Also anti-inflammatory and improves blood flow in necrotizing pancreatitis

36
Q

What is chitosan?

A

A natural biodegradable non toxic carbohydrate derived from deacetylated chitin from shrimp shells - it rapidly forms a gel-like clot on contact with blood