0330 - Approach to Thrombosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is thrombophilia?

A

Hard to define. Clinically used to describe patients who:
Develop VTE spontaneously
VTE is disproportionate to recognised stimulus
Recurrent VTE
VTE at early age

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2
Q

What are the components of Virchow’s triad?

A

Hypercoagulability
Abnormal Blood flow/(thrombosis = stasis)
Endothelial damage

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3
Q

What are some possible outcomes of venous thrombosis?

A
Ischaemia
Embolisation
Resolution
Recanalisation
Propagation (growth)
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4
Q

What are the three parts of the coagulation cascade?

A

Intrinsic (PTT/INR - from surface/foreign body contact, but all factors are in the blood)
Extrinsic (PT - tissue derived, not in blood)
Common (starting at factor X)

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5
Q

Outline the common coagulation cascade.

A

X->Xa
V->Va (Is only a cofactor, V fits in the X)
Prothrombin->thrombin (Factor II)
fibrinogen->fibrin

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6
Q

Outline the intrinsic (aPTT/INR) clotting cascade.

A

aPTT is a TENET of Haematology

XII->XI>IX->VIII->X

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7
Q

Which clotting factor is deficient in Haemophilias A, B, C?

A

A = Eight
B = Nine
C = Eleven
Thinking back to the TENET pathway - CBA = ENE

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8
Q

What is the interplay between thrombosis and cancer?

A

Thrombosis considered a complication of cancer.
20% of VTE cases are associated with active cancer, and 4-6 fold higher risk of VTE in cancer patients.
Causes - Endothelial dysfunction, procoagulant malignant cells, and tissue factor released by macrophages.

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9
Q

What are the three acquired forms of thrombophilia?

A

Pregnancy
Cancer
Antiphospholipid syndrome/antibodies

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10
Q

How does pregnancy interact with Virchow’s triad?

A

Blood - Increased procoagulants (FV, FVIII), reduced anticoagulants (protein S)
Flow - Stasis secondary to pelvic mass
Vessels - Vascular damage during delivery.

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11
Q

How does cancer interact with Virchow’s triad?

A

Blood - procoagulants and other factors in malignant cells.
Flow - Venous Catheters
Vessels - Venous catheters, chemotherapy effects.

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12
Q

How do antiphospholipid antibodies interact with Virchow’s triad?

A

Blood - interact with coag and anticoag pathways, and can activate platelets
Blood flow - NA
Vessels - activate the endothelium.

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13
Q

What are the most common causes of inherited thrombophilias?

A
Biggest 2:
Activated Protein C Resistance
Prothrombin Gene 20210A Mutation
Protein C deficiency
Protein S deficiency
Antithrombin deficiency
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14
Q

Briefly outline Activated Protein C resistance

A

Present in 5-8% of caucasians
Factor Va resists cleavage by activated protein C complex, therefore is not denatured.
85-90% of cases - factor V gene Leiden mutation.

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15
Q

Briefly outline the prothrombin gene mutation that causes thrombophilia.

A

2% incidence in caucasian population.
Mutation at gene position 20210 (like 90210 but not)
Leads to increased amounts of circulating thrombin.

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16
Q

What is Protein C? What does it do?

A

Vitamin K dependent anticoagulant, synthesised in liver.
Activated by thrombin-thrombomodulin complex, and neutralises Factors V and VIII
Also induces fibrinolysis.

17
Q

What is Protein S? What does it do?

A

Vitamin K dependent anticoagulant, synthesised in liver.
Only exists in active form. Exists in Free (40%) and bound (60%) forms.
Free Protein S acts as co-factor for Protein C (so assists in cleaving Va and VIIIa)

18
Q

What are the risk factors for recurrence of thrombophilia?

A
Cannot be reliably predicted.
Active Cancer
Proximal DVT/PE (vs distal DVD)
Male
High BMI