Surgery - Surgical Bleeding Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What is Haemophilia A?

A

Factor VIII deficiency

  • X-linked recessive
  • high rate of de novo mutations
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2
Q

What is Haemophilia B?

A

Factor IX deficiency

-X-linked recessive

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3
Q

What are the clinical features of Haemophilia?

A

Major bleeds following minor trauma
Recurrent haemarthroses –> crippling arthropathies
Compartment syndrome/nerve palsies

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4
Q

What are the appropriate investigations in suspected haemophilia?

A

Raised APTT

Low factor VIII/IX

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5
Q

What are the management options for haemophilia?

A
Avoid NSAIDs/IM injections
Minor bleeding
   -compression & elevation
   -desompressin
Major bleeding
   -recombinant factor VIII/IX to raise factor levels (50% of normal)
Life threatening
   -recombinant factor VIII/IX to raise factor levels (100% of normal)
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6
Q

What are the common causes of clotting factor deficiency?

A
Haemophilia
vWD
Liver disease
DIC
Vit K deficiency
Anticoagulant drugs
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7
Q

What is Von Willebrand’s Disease?

A

Absence of vWF OR presence of abnormally functioning vWF

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8
Q

What are the sx of vWD?

A

Epistaxis
Menorrhagia
Haemarthroses rare

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9
Q

What is the inheritance of vWD?

A

Autosomal recessive (20%)
-complete absence of detectable vWF
Autosomal dominant (80%)
-less severe depletion of vWF

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10
Q

What are the appropriate investigations in suspected vWD?

A

APTT (increased)
INR (normal)
Platelets (normal)

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11
Q

What are the management options for vWD?

A
Tranexamic acid (mild bleeds)
Desompressin/recombinant factor VIII (severe bleeds)
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12
Q

What questions would identify potential bleeding disorders?

A
Site of bleed?
Duration of hx/family hx?
Severity?
Surgical hx?
PMH?
Drug hx?
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13
Q

What factors about the site of bleed may help identify a bleeding disorder?

A
Muscle/joint bleeds
   -coagulation issue
Purpura/epistaxis/menorrhagia/GI haemorrhage
   -platelet/vWD
Recurrent bleeds
   -local endothelial abnormality
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14
Q

What factors about the surgical hx may help identify a bleeding disorder?

A

If starts immediately = platelet

If starts after sev hours = coagulation

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15
Q

What signs may suggest a bleeding disorder?

A

Skin (purpura, bruises, telangiectasia)
Joints (haemarthroses)
Abdomen (splenomegaly, hepatic dysfunction)

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16
Q

What is DIC?

A

Systemic activation of coagulation pathway

  • extensive intravascular coagulation
  • fibrin clot development
  • thrombotic occlusion of arterial microvasculature
  • depletion of clotting factors/platelet consumption
17
Q

What are the common causes of DIC?

A
Infection
Trauma
Malignancy
Obstetric complication (amniotic emboli, pre-eclampsia)
Severe liver failure
Tissue destruction (pancreatitis/burns)
Toxic/immunogenic stimuli
18
Q

What are the clinical features of DIC?

A

Bruising
Excessive bleeding from any site
Renal failure

19
Q

What are the appropriate investigations in suspected DIC?

A
Low platelets
Low fibrinogen
Raised PT & APTT
Raised D-dimer
Blood film (shistocytes)
20
Q

What are the management options for DIC?

A
Treat the cause
Aggressive resus
   -replacing platelets
   -coag factors
   -fibrinogen
Protein C (reduces mortality in multi-organ failure/sepsis)