Platelet Function and Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Platelets are shed from what cells?

A

Megakaryocytes

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2
Q

What is the hormone that controls platelet production?

A

Thrombopoietin

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3
Q

Life span of platelets

A

7-10 days

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4
Q

Structure of platelet plasma membrane

A

Invaginations increase surface area for coagulation factor absorption
Phospholipids provide critical template for coagulation cascade

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5
Q

2 types of granules in platelets and what they contain

A

Alpha: proteins associated with adhesion and clotting
Dense: Ca, nucleotides, serotonin

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6
Q

What is the primary function of platelets? 3 general steps to do it

A

Formation of initial hemostatic plug at site of vascular injury
Steps: adhesion to vessel wall, secretion of granule contents, aggregation

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7
Q

How do platelets adhere to the vessel wall?

A

Normal platelet flow is halted by engagement of Gp1a2a with exposed collagen in subendothelium
Subendothelial microfibrils bind vWF - it then binds to platelet Gp1b9

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8
Q

How does platelet morphology change when they are activated?

A

Platelets become more spherical
Extrude pseudopods
Form a monolayer

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9
Q

How is the secretion of granule contents triggered, and what does the release cause?

A

Collagen binding activates prostaglandin synthesis
Thromboxane A2 is formed, and the activated PLC causes granule release
The release of ADP, serotonin, fibrinogen and enzymes triggers further conformational change and activation

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10
Q

How is platelet aggregation triggered?

A

Gp1b9 binding causes activation of Gp2b3a, which exposed binding sites for fibrinogen
Fibrinogen binds platelets to each other
NOT the coagulation cascade
ADP and TXA2 recruit other platelets

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11
Q

3 components of primary hemostasis

A

Vessel wall
Platelet
Von Willebrand factor

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12
Q

Qualitative vs quantitative platelet defect

A

Qual: defect in platelet function
Quan: insufficient numbers

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13
Q

3 ways to break up a congenital qualitative platelet disorder

A

Receptor defect: defective adhesion or aggregation
Storage pool defect: impaired platelet activation
Secretory defect: defective signal transduction, mimics ASA

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14
Q

3 ways to break up an acquired platelet function defect (qualitative)

A
  1. Drugs (NSAIDs, ASA, heparin, etc)
  2. Systemic conditions (renal failure, bypass)
  3. Hematologic disease (MDS, etc)
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15
Q

Are quantitative or qualitative platelet disorders more common?

A

Quantitative
So get the platelet count!
And look at the morphology

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16
Q

Causes of thrombocytopenia: reduced production

A

Congenital (rare): family history, may also have a function defect
Acquired: B12/folate deficiency, infiltrative, marrow failure, meds
Platelet transfusions are effective, rarely required though

17
Q

Causes of thrombocytopenia: sequestration (hypersplenism)

A

Congestive: cirrhosis, portal HTN
Reactive: infections, some autoimmune diseases
Infiltrative: benign or malignant
Platelet transfusions will have limited effect

18
Q

Causes of thrombocytopenia: increased consumption

A

Immune
Drug induced
MAHA (microangiopathic hemolytic anemia)
Non specific: sepsis, DIC, significant blood loss

19
Q

Immune thrombocytopenia

A

Platelet equivalent of AIHA: RES/spleen mediated clearance of Ab coated platelets
Antibody is not readily identifiable
Spleen not enlarged!!!
Clinical manifestations are rare unless platelets really low (bruising, petechiae, etc)
Treat with immune suppression
Platelet transfusions are ineffective

20
Q

Heparin induced thrombocytopenia

A

Immune response that onsets 4-14 days after starting heparin
Makes an antibody to heparin that cross reacts with platelets
High chance of venous/arterial thromboembolism at 30 days
Treatment: stop heparin and usually give alternate anticoagulant

21
Q

Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA)

A

Group of disorders with similar pathophys
Microvascular occlusive disorders: systemic or intrarenal aggregation of platelets, thrombocytopenia, mechanical injury to RBCs
Triggered by: HUS, TTP

22
Q

Thrombotic thrombocytopenia purpura (TTP)

A

When the enzyme that cleaves vWF into smaller pieces (ADAMTS13) isnt working
Because of an autoantibody
VWF sticks out of endothelial cells and in small vessels where the flow is slow platelets can get stuck and form a clot
Medical emergency - treat with plasma exchange
Platelet transfusions are contraindicated

23
Q

Classic pentad for TTP

A
Thrombocytopenia (stuck inside vessels)
Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA)
Fever
Neurologic signs and symptoms
Renal impairment