Coagulation Physiology & Disorders Flashcards

0
Q

What happens in primary haemostatsis?

A

Platelets bind to breach

Forms platelet plug

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1
Q

What initiates coagulation?

A

Damage to vessel wall

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2
Q

What happens in secondary haemostatsis?

A

Fibrin clot forms

Stabilises platelet plug

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3
Q

What prevents clots in intact vessels?

A

Endothelial cells

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4
Q

What acts as a bridge between vessel wall & platelet?

A

VWF

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5
Q

What makes the fibrin clot?

A

Coagulation factors

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6
Q

What are the 2 main features of prothrombin (coagulation factor)?

A

Enzyme site

Glutamic acid tail

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7
Q

What does vitamin K do to the Glutamic acid tail of prothrombin?

A

It converts it into a negatively charged gamma carboxylated Glutamic acid (which can stick to surface of platelets)

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8
Q

What converts Vitamin K epoxide back to Vitamin K?

A

Vitamin K reductase

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9
Q

What enzyme does Warfarin inhibit in order to thin the blood?

A

Vitamin K reductase

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10
Q

What is produced locally at vessel damage that thickens blood?

A

Thrombin

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11
Q

What does thrombin cleave?

A

Fibrinogen —> fibrin

Fibrin spontaneously polymerises to form clot

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12
Q

What process breaks down the fibrin clot?

A

Fibrinolysis

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13
Q

What happens in fibrinolysis?

A

Plasminogen binds to fibrin & it is activated
Plasminogen—>plasmin
Plasmin cleaves fibrin & breaks down clot

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14
Q

What converts plasminogen —> plasmin?

A

Tissue plasminogen activator

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15
Q

What deficiency is seen in Haemophilia A?

A

Factor 8 deficiency

16
Q

What deficiency is seen in Haemophilia B?

A

Factor 9 deficiency

17
Q

How is Haemophilia inherited?

A

X linked recessive

Mother gives to son

18
Q

Name a common place of bleeding in haemophilia & what this causes

A

Joint & muscle

Chronic joint damage & disability

19
Q

Is Von Willebrand disease more or less common than haemophilia?

A

More common

20
Q

What can’t form in VW disease?

A

The platelet plug

⬇️ platelet vessel wall adhesion
⬇️ platelet aggregation
⬇️ factor 8

21
Q

What can’t form in haemophilia?

A

The fibrin clot

22
Q

What 2 tests do you do for a bleeding patient?

A

FBC
- (low platelets, Hb, MCV)

Coagulation screen
- (PT, aPTT, TCT, Fibrinogen level)

23
Q

What is measured to see how we’ll warfarin is working?

A

INR

24
Q

What is the target INR?

A

2-3 or 3-4

Depending on bleeding risk

25
Q

What converts

Fibrinogen ➡️ fibrin

A

Thrombin

26
Q

What causes Vitamin K deficiency?

A
Warfarin
New borns
Critically ill
Obstructive jaundice
Malabsorption
27
Q

Causes of DIC (abnormal clotting & bleeding, life threatening)

A
Infection (meningococcus)
Malignancy
Obstetric (placental abruption, eclampsia, amniotic fluid embolism)
Shock
ABO mismatch
Venom (snake, spider)
28
Q

Thrombocytopenia means…

A

Low platelet count

29
Q

What is seen clinically in DIC

A

Generalised oozing (bento puncture sites)

30
Q

What is seen in blood test if DIC patient?

A

Prolonged PT, aPTT, TT
Thrombocytopenia
Low fibrinogen
Raised D-dimer

31
Q

What test tells you if a prolonged thrombin time is due to heparin?

A

A reptilase time