Acquired disorders of haemostasis. Flashcards

1
Q

how can you determine whether or not the acquired bleeding disorder is due to deficiency in the inhibitor.

A

APTT (measures the activity of the intrinsic and common pathways of coagulation)
Do one test on patients blood and a repeat test on patients blood mixed with normal blood.
If the repeat test shows significant correction then the deficiency is due to a lack of inhibitor.

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2
Q

acquirered bleeding disorders include

A
vitamin K deficiency
liver disease
massive transfusion syndrome
DIC
iatrogenic
acquired inhibitors.
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3
Q

how are patients with the possibility of a acquired bleeding disorder assessed

A
  • Clinical history
  • Date of onset, previous history of bleeding episodes and clinical pattern
  • Response to challenges e.g. surgery, dental extraction
  • For young children: bleeding from umbilical stump, vaccination, and circumcision.
  • Requirement for medical/ surgical intervention
  • Other systemic illness and drug history
  • Family history
  • Clinical examination: pattern of any bruising or other evidence of haemorrhagic signs, signs of underlying disease, joints, muscles and skin.
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4
Q

how can portal hypertension effect the blood plasma level.

A

portal hypertension causes congestion in the spleen and as more than 1/3 platelet are found in the spleen you will get less in the plasma.

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5
Q

which coagulation cascade factors are vitamin K dependent

A

2,7,9,10

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6
Q

which organ synthesises all the clotting factors

A

liver

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7
Q

when vitamin K is used as a co-factor what does is become

A

VKOR- vitamin K epoxide

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8
Q

what enzyme converts Vitamin K to VKOR

A

gamma glutamyl carboxylase

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9
Q

which enzyme converts VKOR to vitamin K

A

vitamin K reducatse

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10
Q

which enzyme does wharfing work against

A

vitamin K reducatse.

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11
Q

what are the main causes of vitamin K deficenccy

A

prolonged nutritional deficiency.

Obstructive jaundice- cannot get bile salts in gut so fat uptake is reduced which reduced vitamin K uptake

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12
Q

what major risk do patients with liver disease have when undergoing surgery

A

bleeding

liver typically produces the clotting factors.

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13
Q

what factors cause impaired haemostats is in liver disease

A
thrombocytopenia
platelet dysfunction
reduced plasma concentration
delayed fibrin monomer polymeriation
excessive plasmin activity.
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14
Q

which is the only clotting factor whose amount is not reduced in liver disease

A

FVIII.

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15
Q

define massive transfusion

A

Transfusion of a volume equal to the patient’s total blood volume in less than 24 hours or
50% blood volume loss within 3 hours

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16
Q

what causes the haemostatic abnormalities in a massive transfusion

A

dilutional depletion of platelets and coagulation factors (mainly V and VIII)
DIC
underlying disease, eg liver or renal drug treatment or surgery
Citrate toxicity- hypothermia
hypocalcaemia.

17
Q

what is most likely cause of DIC

A

sepsis of gram -ve organism

causes damage and tissue factor exposure

18
Q

what are the consequences of DIC

A

consumption of clotting factors and platelets, microvascular (thrombosis), tissue ischaema and organ damage.
Activation of fibrinolysis microangiopathic haemolysis.

19
Q

Causes of acute DIC

A
sepsis
obstetric problems
trauma/tissue necrosis
acute intravascular haemolysis
fulminant liver disease.
20
Q

laboratory tests for DIC

A

FBC

coagulation screen- PT, APTT, TCT, Fibrinogen concentration, FDP or D-dimer.

21
Q

Is a coagulation screen for DIC do the tests have shortened or prolonged test results

A

prolonged.

22
Q

Is the D dimer elevated or suppressed in DIC

A

elevated.

23
Q

Treatment for DIC

A

treat the underlying cause
supportive treatment- maintain tissue perfusion, co-ordinate treatment with fresh frozen plasma
and provide folic acid and vitamin K supplements.

24
Q

define prothrombin ratio

A

patient’s prothrombin time/ mean normal prothrombin time.

25
Q

what is ISI

A

Correction factor to account for sensitivity of thromboplastin compared with the international reference preparation

26
Q

drugs which potentiate warfarin affect include

A
  • Cimetidine
  • Ampicillin (oral)
  • Amiodarone
  • NSAID’s
  • Sulphinpyrazone
  • Chlorpromazine
  • Cotrimoxazole
  • Sulphonylureas
  • Erythromycin
  • Corticosteroids
  • Cephlosporins
27
Q

drugs which antagonise the warfarin effect.

A
  • Cholestyramine
  • Spironolactone
  • Rifampicin
  • Carbamazepine
  • Vitamin K
28
Q

what is a side effect of too much oral anticoagulant

A

reduced platelet levels.