VTE recorded lectures Dr.Weber- Part 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are Venous Thrombi composed of?

A

Red blood cells, fibrin, and few platelets

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2
Q

How do thromboembolisms form?

A

-Flow obstruction
-Vascular tissue wall becomes inflamed
-Thrombus occurs and affects venous blood flow OR
-emboli occur and enter pulmonary circulation

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3
Q

What is Virchow’s Triad?

A
  1. Abnormalities of clotting components that lead to hyper-coagulable state
  2. Abnormality of surfaces in contact with blood flow that lead to endothelial injury
  3. Abnormalities in blood flow which leads to circulatory stasis
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4
Q

What factors activate coagulation?

A

Von Willebrand factor
Tissue factor
Factor Xa
Factor VIIa
Factor XIIa
Thrombin (Factor 2)

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5
Q

What factors inhibit coagulation?

A

Heparin
Thrombomodulin
Antithrombin
Protein C
Protein S
Tissue Factor Pathway inhibitor

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6
Q

Explain the coagulation cascade?

A

Think of it as 3 stages
1. Initiation
- The initiation of clot formation is caused due to damage of the blood vessel wall that exposes the endothelium to Tissue factor which activates factor X and V to allow for prothrombin to become Thrombin (just small amount)
2. Amplification
- Thrombin begins the amplification process and activates many plotting factors like V, VII, vWF, and XI
3. Propagation
- this involves collagen and thrombin activated platelets that leads to activation of factor X and V which cleave prothrombin to thrombin in large amounts. The large amounts of thrombin then cleave fibrinogen to fibrin

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7
Q

What is Postthrombotic syndrome?

A

This is long term complication of DVT caused by damage to venous valves

Usually happens when patients have improper management of VTE

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8
Q

What are DVT risk factors?

A
  • those 40 and older
  • Family history of VTE
  • Heart Failure
  • Immobilization for longer than 10 days
  • Malignancy
  • Myocardial Infarction
  • Obesity
  • Orthopedic injury
  • Oral contraceptive/ estrogen use
  • paralysis
  • postoperative state (within 3 months)
  • Pregnancy
  • Prior DVT
  • Varicose Veins
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9
Q

what are the nonpharmacologic treatment options?

A

Always baseline monitoring
1. DVT
- Bed rest ( with appropriate anticoagulations on board)
- Elevation of feet
- Pain management
- Compression stockings

  1. PE
    - Oxygen
    - Mechanical ventilation
    - Compression stockings
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10
Q

When picking treatment what would be an ideal anticoagulant?

A
  • Oral
  • Once daily dosing
  • quick onset
  • limited monitoring
    limited or no drug interactions
  • Available and effective antidote
  • wide therapeutic index
  • low cost
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11
Q

Evolution of anticoagulation

A

1930s
- Heparin (inj)
1950s
- Warfarin (adv: oral)
1980s
- LMWH (adv: more predictable dosing)
1990s
- DTI
Xa inhibitors (adv: less monitoring needed)
2010
- DTI/Xa inhibitors (adv:oral)

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12
Q
A
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