Diseases for Final Flashcards

1
Q

Von Willebrand Disease

A

Things you must know:

  • Most common hereditary bleeding disorder
  • Autosomal dominant
  • vW factor decreased (or abnormal)
  • Variable severity
3 Types of Von Willebrand Disease:
Type 1 (70%): Decreased vWF
Type 2 (25%) abnormal vWF
Type 3 (5%) no vWF

Sx: Mucosal bleeding in most patients (bloody nose, easy bruising, heavy menses), Deep joint bleeding in severe cases.

Lab Tests: Prolonged bleeding time, PTT prolonged (corrects w/ mixing study), INR normal, vWF level decreased (normal in type 2), Platelet aggregation studies abnormal. No agglutination with ristocetin.

vWF - binds GP Ib

Treatment: Desmopressin (DDAVP) (raises VIII and vWF levels in type I), Cryoprecipitate (contains vWF and VIII), Factor VIII prior to procedures

Incidence: 1 in 100 - often asymptomatic however

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2
Q

Hemophilia A

A

Things you must know:

  • Most common factor deficiency
  • X-linked recessive in most cases (30% are random)
  • Factor VIII level decreased
  • Variable amount of “factor” bleeding

Sx: Severity depends on amount of VIII, typical factor bleeding (deep joint, prolonged after dental work), rarely mucosal hemorrhage

Lab tests: INR, TT, platelet count, bleeding time (normal), PTT prolonged (corrects w/ mixing study), abnormal factor VIII assays, abnormal DNA studies

Rx: Desmopressin (DDAVP), Factor VIII (Only when symptomatic)

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3
Q

Hemophilia B

A

Things you must know:

  • Factor IX level decreased
  • Much less common than hemophilia A
  • X-linked recessive
  • Variable amount of “factor” bleeding

Sx: Severity depends on amount of VIII, typical factor bleeding (deep joint, prolonged after dental work), rarely mucosal hemorrhage

Lab tests: INR, TT, platelet count, bleeding time (normal), PTT prolonged (corrects w/ mixing study), abnormal factor VIII assays, abnormal DNA studies

Rx: Desmopressin (DDAVP), Factor VIII (Only when symptomatic)

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4
Q

XI deficiency

A

Bleeding only after trauma

Rare

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5
Q

XIII deficiency

A

Severe neonatal bleeding

Rare

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6
Q

Bernard-Soulier Syndrome

A

Abnormal IB–> abnormal adhesion

Big platelets and severe bleeding

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7
Q

Glanzmann Thrombasthenia

A

No IIb-IIIa

No aggregation

Severe bleeding

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8
Q

Gray platelet syndrome

A

No alpha granules

Big empty platelets

Mild bleeding

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9
Q

Delta Granuled Deficiency

A

No delta granules

Can be a part of Chediak-Higashi syndrome

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10
Q

Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation

A

Things you must know:

  • Underlying disorders
  • Something triggers coag, causing many (micro) thrombi
  • Platelets and factors get used up, causing bleeding
  • Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia.

Causes:
Dumpers - Obstetric comlications, adenocarcinoma, acute promyelocytic (M3) leukemia

Rippers: Bacterial sepsis, trauma, burns, vasculitis.

MOST common:
Malignancy
Obstetric Complications
Sepsis
Trauma

Sx: Insidious of fulminant, multi-system disease, thrombosis and/or bleeding.

Labs: INR, PTT, TT, prolonged. FDPs increased, fibrinogen decreased.

Rx: Treat underlying disorder and support with blood products

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11
Q

Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura

A

Things you must know:

  • Antiplatelet antibodies
  • Acute vs. Chronic
  • Dx of exlusion
  • Steroids or splenectomy

Pathogenesis: Autoantibodies to GPIIB/IIIa or Ib. Bind to platelets. Splenic macrophages eat platelets.

Chronic: Adult women, primary or secondary, insidious (nosebleeds, easy bruising), Danger of bleeding into brain

Acute: Children, abrupt (follows viral illness), usually self-limiting, may become chronic

Labs: Signs of platelet destruction: thrombocytopenia, normal/increased megakaryoctyes, big platelets. INR/PTT, No specific test for ITP

RX: Steroids, IVIG, splenectomy

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12
Q

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura

A

Things you must know:

  • Pentad: MAHA, thrombocytopenia, fever, neurologic defects, renal failure
  • Defeciency in ADAMTS13
  • Big vWF multimers trap platelets
  • Plasmapheresis or plasma infusions

Pathogenesis: Just released vWF is unusually large (UL) which causes platelet aggregation, ADAMTS13 cleaves UL vWF into less active bits. TTP is deficient in ADAMTS13

Clinical Findings: Hematuria, jaundice (MAHA), bleeding, bruising (thrombocytopenia), fever, bizarre behavior (neurologic deficits), decreased urine output (renal failure)

Treatment of TTP: Aquired TTP: Plasmapheresis, Hereditary TTP: plasma infusions

Medical emergency as MI from thrombi in coronary arteries is a typical COD.

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13
Q

Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome

A

Things you must know:

  • MAHA and thrombocytopenia
  • Epidemic (E. coli) vs. non-epidemic
  • Toxin damages endothelium
  • Treat supportively (not abx)

Pathogenesis:
Epidemic = E coli O157:H7 makes nasty toxin that injures endothelial cells.
Non-epidemic = defect in complement factor H is inherited or acquired (unsure how this activates platelets)

Clinical findngs:
Epidemic: Children, elderly; bloody diarrhea, then renal failure; fatal in 5% of cases
Non-epidemic: renal failure, relapsing-remitting, fatal in 50% of cases

Treatment: supportive care, dialysis, no abx (increased toxin release)

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14
Q

Thombosis/Emboli

A

Risk Factors/Virchow’s Triad:

  1. ) Endothelial damage (atherosclerosis)
  2. ) Stasis: Immobilization, varicose veins, cardiac dysfucntion
  3. )Hypercoagulability: trauma/surgery, carcinoma, estrogen/postpartum, thrombotic disorders.

Labs: INR, PTT, TT

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15
Q

Factor V Leiden

A

Things you must know:

  • Most common cause of unexplained thrombosis
  • Point mutation in factor V gene (can’t be cleaved by protein C)
  • Factor V can’t be turned off
  • Need genetic test for dx

Common! Half of patients w/ unexplained thrombosis. 5% of caucasians. VERY rare in non-caucasians

Clot risk: heterozygotes 7x normal; homozygotes 80x normal (normal risk is 1-2 per 1000 per year.)

Dx: PTT and INR are not helpful. Need genetic testing.

Rx: Don’t unless there is a thrombosis. Warfarin as needed.

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16
Q

Antithrombin III deficiency

A

Things you must know:

  • ATIII is a natural anticoagulant (inhibits IIa, VIIa, IXa, XA, and XIa)
  • Potentiated by heparin
  • Many gene mutations exist, but all are very rare

Clotting risk: homozygotes can’t live; heterozygotes - half get clots;

Rx: antithrombin concentrates required

17
Q

Protein C and S Deficiencies

A

Things you must know:

  • Proteins C (inactivates Va and VIIIa and S are natural anticoagulants)
  • C is also fibrinolytic (promotes t-Pa) and anti-inflammatory (keeps cytokines low)
  • Warfarin-induced skin necrosis
  • C deficiency rare; S deficiency super rare

Clotting risk: heterozygotes: 7x risk; risk of warfarin-induced skin necrosis and purpura fulminans.

18
Q

Purpura fulminans

A

Thombotic state + vascular injury –> skin necrosis.

Associated w/ protein C and S deficiency and sepsis

Rx: protein C

19
Q

Factor II Gene mutation

A

Things you must know:

  • Factor II = prothrombin
  • Mutated gene makes too MUCH prothrombin
  • Prothrombin itself is normal
  • Caucasians only

5% of caucasians

Clot risk: 2-20x

20
Q

Hyperhomocysteinemia

A

Things you must know:

  • Homocysteine converts folate
  • Homocysteinuria = rare metabolic disorder
  • Too much homocysteine = thrombosis
  • Many causes.

Not so rare. MTHFR gene mutation or B12/Folate deficiency.

Homocysteine is toxic to endothelium via ROS and interferes w/ NO vasodialation and antithrombotic activity.

Increase risk of thrombis, premature atherosclerosis. Risk of venous thrombosis up 2.5x and arterial thrombosis 10x. (less if secondary to B12 deficiency)

21
Q

Homocysteinuria

A

Rare metabolic disorder w/ deficient trans-sulphuration enzyme.

Increase homocystein in blood, urine

Increase thrombosis, premature atherosclerosis

22
Q

Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome

A

Things you must know:

  • Autoantibodies vs. phospholipids
  • Falsely prolong INR, syphilis, DAT
  • May cause thrombosis

Three variants: anticardiolipin, lupus anticoagulants, antibodies vs. other molecules.

Promote coagulation in vivo; inhibit coagulation in vitro.

Sx: recurrent thrombosis, recurrent abortions, increased risk of stroke, pulmonary hypertension, renal failure

Causes:
Children - infection (mild risk)
Adults - Autoimmune diseases (moderate risk)
Elderly - Drugs (no risk)\

Labs: Prolonged PTT (Doesn’t correct)

23
Q

Oral Candidiasis (thrush)

A

Patients w/ HIV/AIDS can present with severe thrush often extending down into esophagus.

Predictive of disease progression to AIDS

24
Q

Oral Hairy Leukoplakia

A

OHL is due to epstein-barr virus in immunosuppressed patients. White hairy substance on tongue/mouth.

Predictive of disease progression to AIDS

25
Q

Kaposi’s Sarcoma

A

Rare cancer of blood vessels that is caused by HHV-8.

Associated w/ HIV

Manifests as bluish-red oval-shaped patches that eventually become thickened. Lesions may appear singly or in clusters.

Predictive of disease progression to AIDS

26
Q

AIDS

A

When HIV infected patient’s CD4 drops below 200.

At risk of contracting: Pneumocystic jivoreci, cryptococcal meningitis, and toxoplasmosis

If CD4 drops below 50:

  • Mycobacterium avium
  • CMV
  • Lymphoma
  • Dementia
  • Most deaths occur with Cd4 counts below 50

Other key opportunistics:
-TB, Cryptosporidosis, Isosporiasis, NHL, VZV/HSV encephalitis and skin

Risk factors for death within 3 years:

  • CD4 below 200
  • Viral load over 100,000
  • Older than 50 years of age
  • Injection drug user
  • Having prior AIDS-defining illness
27
Q

Pneumocystis jiroveci (carnii)

A

Most common opportunistic infx in HIV. Interstitial pneumonia.

Yeast-like fungus.

Commonly found in healthy lungs, but rarely causes sx unless immunocompromise.

Dx: sx, CXR, sputum silver stain (induced by bronchioalveolar lavage)

Sx: SOB, dry cough, fever

Rx: Bactrim