Session 2 - Haemostasis and blood groups Flashcards

1
Q

Function of platelets

A

help stop blood loss from damaged vessels by forming a platelet plug. Their granules also contain chemicals that promote blood clotting.

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2
Q

Process for making platelets

A

Thrombopoiesis Thrombopoietin stimulates myeloid stem cells to produce platelets in bone marrow.

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3
Q

1st stage before becoming a platelet

A

Megakaryocytes Each megakaryocyte splits into 2000 to 3000 fragments, enclosed by a piece of cell membrane. This is a platelet (thrombocyte).

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4
Q

What is Haemostasis

A

Stoppage of bleeding when blood vessels are damaged

Prevents haemorrhage ( loss of large amounts of blood)

Mechanisms: Vascular spasm, platelet formation, blood clotting

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5
Q

Haemostasis: Vascular spasm

A

oReflex contraction of smooth muscle of small blood vessels when arteries or arterioles are damaged

o Only for small blood vessel or arteriole.

oCan reduce blood loss for several hours until other mechanisms can take over

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6
Q

Haemostasis: Platlet plug formation

A

o Platelets store a lot of chemicals in granules needed for platelet plug formation

Platlet plug formation:

Platelet Adhesion

• platelets stick to exposed collagen and damaged endothelial cells in vessel wall

Platelet Release Reaction

  • platelets “activated” by adhesion
  • extend projections & make contact
  • release thromboxane A2, ADP, serotonin

Platelet Aggregation

  • activated platelets stick together to form a mass called a ‘platelet plug’
  • plug reinforced by fibrin threads formed during clotting process
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7
Q

Blood clotting

A

Clotting is a cascade of reactions in which each clotting factor activates the next in a fixed sequence resulting in the formation of fibrin threads

oKey Steps

  • Formation of prothrombinase
  • Prothrombinaseand Ca+2 convert prothrombin into thrombin
  • Thrombin converts soluble fibrinogen into insoluble fibrin threads
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8
Q

What are the two pathways of the clotting cascade and their common pathway

A

Extrinsic (tissue trauma) - seconds

Intrinsic (Blood trauma) - several minutes

Common pathway:

oProthrombinase+ Ca+2

•catalyze the conversion of prothrombin → thrombin

oThrombin + Ca2+

  • converts fibrinogen → fibrin threads
  • activates fibrin stabilizing factor XIII

Strengthened Fibrin threads (end result) &

Clot retraction = Platelets pull on fibrin threads causing clot retraction (tightening)

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9
Q

Blood vessel repair

A

oEdges of damaged vessel are pulled together

oFibroblasts and endothelial cells repair the blood vessel

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10
Q

Vitamin K is required for

A

normal clotting

produced by bacteria in the large intestine

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11
Q

Haemostatic control mechanisms

A

oFibrinolytic system = Break down of fibrin threads when repair completed or when there are inappropriate clots = fibrinolysisis dissolution of a clot

oInactive plasminogen is incorporated into the clot

•plasminogen becomes plasmin (fibrinolysin) which digests fibrin threads and inactivating fibrinogen, prothrombin, factors V, VIII, XII

oClot formation remains localized

•fibrin threads trap / absorbs thrombin

oEndothelial cells and WBC produce prostacyclins that oppose thromboxane A2 (platelet adhesion and release)

oAnticoagulants - present in blood, supress clotting

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12
Q

Anticoagulant agents

A

Anticoagulants:suppress or prevent blood clotting

oPatients who are at increased risk of forming blood clots may receive an anticoagulant drug

•Aspirin inhibits vasoconstriction and platelet aggregation through stopping production of TxA2.

heparin

–administered during haemodialysis and surgery

•warfarin (Coumadin®)

–antagonist to vitamin K so blocks synthesis of clotting factors

–slower than heparin

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13
Q

Thrombolytic agents

A

are injected to dissolve clots

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14
Q

Universal recipients and universal donors

A

Universal recepients: People with AB blood have no antibodies in plasma and are able to recieve any type of blood

Universal Donors: People with type O blood cell have no antigens on their cells and are able to donate their blood to anyone - highly wanted for donations

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15
Q

In the ABO system ( blood types) Agglutinogens are

A

A and B and are found on the surface of RBCs to determine blood types

  • display only antigen A -blood type A
  • display only antigen B -blood type B
  • display both antigens A and B -blood type AB
  • display neither antigen -blood type O
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16
Q

(blood types) Agglutinins are

A

Antibodies present in plasma designated as anti-A and anti-B, that react with agglutinogens (antigen A and antigen B)

  • anti-A antibody reacts with antigen A
  • anti-B antibody reacts with antigen B

When they react they will stick together and form clots therefore if antigen A (meaning you are Blood Type A) is found on your RBC you require anti-B antibody