Coagulation Flashcards

1
Q

Which interaction leads to adhesion? Which leads to aggregation?

A

Adhesion between GPIba:vWF

Aggregation between GPIIb/IIIa:Fibrinogen

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2
Q

What are some molecules that bind receptors on passing platelets for recruitment/activation?

A

5-HT and ADP

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3
Q

What are the vitamin K dependent cofactors?

A

II, VII, IX and X

Protein C & Protein S

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4
Q

What screening tests should be done for mucosal bleeding (nosebleeds, menorrhagia)?

A

Platelet defect and vWF

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5
Q

What screening tests should be done for deep bleeding (joints, muscles, intracranial)?

A

Factor deficiency tests

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6
Q

Thrombocytopenia due to decreased production

A

Vit B12 deficiency, marrow failure or disease

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7
Q

Thrombocytopenia non-immune mediated

A

blood film often abnormal (DIC)

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8
Q

Thrombocytopenia immune mediated–Fab mediated

A

Blood film usually normal (ITP)

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9
Q

Thrombocytopenia immune mediated–Non-fab mediated

A

Heparin induced thrombocytopenia (Fc mediated)
Immune complex disease (HIV)
TTP (autoantibody to ADAMTS13–>deficiency)

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10
Q

Transient autoimmune disease about 10 days after heparin therapy

A

Heparin-induced Thrombocytopenia

Auto-antibodies to PF4:Heparin

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11
Q

Congenital absence of GPIb

A

Bernard Soulier Syndrome

Failure of adhesion

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12
Q

Congenital absence of GPIIb/IIIa

A

Glanzman’s Thrombasthenia

Failure of platelets to aggregate

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13
Q

Autoimmune production of IgG against platelet antigens (eg GPIIb/IIIa) –> consumed by splenic macrophages

A

Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura

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14
Q

What are some differences between the acute and chronic form of ITP?

A

Acute: usually in children, weeks after viral infection/immunization; self-limiting
Chronic: usually adults (women of child-bearing age), less likely to recover –> txt: corticosteroids, IVIG, Rituximab, last resort splenectomy

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15
Q

Platelets consumed in formation of microthrombi –> RBCs are sheared as they cross microthrombi (hemolytic anemia with schistocytes)

A

Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia

TTP
HUS

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16
Q

What is the PFA-100 lab test?

A

Screens for platelet and vWF function
Membrane is coated with collagen, blood is drawn through membrane, vWF sticks to collagen, platelets stick to vWF and eventually clog the hole –> measure the time to occlusion

17
Q

What causes TTP?

A

An acquired auto-antibody or congenital mutation to ADAMTS13 that results in large uncleaved multimers that lead to abnormal platelet adhesion –> develop microthrombi

18
Q

What form of E. coli will put you at risk for HUS?

A

O157:H7

19
Q

What is added to a prothrombin time?

A

Tissue factor, phospholipid and calcium to citrated plasma

20
Q

What is added in a PTT?

A

Surface activator, phospholipid and calcium to citrated plasma

21
Q

What does it mean if the clotting time corrects with a 1:1 mix test?

A

A factor deficiency is likely

If it does not correct than it is likely an inhibitor

22
Q

How is hemophilia inherited?

A

X linked recessive

23
Q

What are some things that may cause vitamin K deficiency?

A

Drugs (warfarin, antibiotics that decrease bowel flora)
Malabsorption or dietary deficiency
Liver disease
Newborns

24
Q

What will the labs look like in someone who has vWF deficiency?

A

Increased bleeding time
Increased PTT
Normal PT

25
Q

What is the pathophysiology behind vWF deficiency?

A

vWF normally stabilizes factor VIII – deficiency ruins this and decreased the half life of factor VIII

26
Q

What is a treatment for vWF deficiency?

A

Desmopressin (Increases vWF release from Weibel Palade bodies)

27
Q

Treatment for heparin induced thrombocytopenia

A

Stop heparin

Start direct thrombin inhibitor

28
Q

Which factors does antithrombin inactivate?

A

IIa and Xa

29
Q

Which factors does Protein C inactivate?

A

Va and VIIIa

30
Q

Widespread microthrombi result in ischemia and infarction –> consumption of platelets and factors results in bleeding (IV and mucosal sites)

A

DIC

31
Q

Mutated form of factor V that lacks the cleavage site for deactivation by protein C

A

Factor V Leiden – VENOUS thrombotic risk factor

Arg 506 replaced with Gln

32
Q

what increases the risk of warfarin skin necrosis?

A

Protein C deficiency

33
Q

Antibodies against phospholipids that damage cells leading to the formation of clots in arteries and veins

A

Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome

34
Q

What are some antiphospholipid antibodies to test for?

A

Anti-cardiolipin

Lupus anticoagulant

35
Q

Some syndromes associated with DIC?

A
Malignancy 
Amniotic fluid 
Fat embolism 
Acute hemolytic process 
Heparin assoc thrombocytopenia 
Sepsis
36
Q

what might Purpura Fulminans be a presenting symptom for?

A

Meningococcal sepsis

Severe protein C deficiency in a newborn

37
Q

What is hemophilia C?

A

Deficiency in factor XI affecting men and women equally

38
Q

What is the clinical pentad of TTP?

A
Thrombocytopenia
Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (schistocytes/RBC fragments) 
Renal insufficiency 
Neurological symptoms
Fever