Arterial Thrombosis and Anti-Platelet Drugs Flashcards

1
Q

What will an arterial thrombosis lead to?

A

MI
Stroke
Critical limb ischaemia

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2
Q

Describe an arterial thrombosis?

A

Failure in primary haemostasis

Platelet rich thrombus

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3
Q

What is atherosclerosis?

A

Damage to endothelium of arteries
Recruitment of foamy macrophages rich in cholesterol
Forms plaques rich in cholesterol

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4
Q

What does a stable atherosclerotic plaque look like histologically?

A

Hyalinised and calcified

Result in stable angina and intermittent claudication

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5
Q

What does an unstable atherosclerotic plaque look like?

A

Plaque rupture
Platelets recruited
Acute thrombosis

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6
Q

Why does plaque rupture lead to platelet aggregration?

A

Platelet adheres to exposed endothelium and release of VWF
Platelets activated; release of granules that activate coagulation and recruit platelets
Platelet aggregation via membrane glycoprotein

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7
Q

What are risk factors for arterial thrombosis?

A
Factors that damage endothelium, increase foamy macrophages and activate platelets 
Hypertension (damage to endothelium, platelet activation) 
Smoking (endothelium, platelets) 
High cholesterol (accumulated in plaque) 
DM (endothelium, platelets, cholesterol)
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8
Q

How can arterial thrombosis be prevented?

A
Stop smoking
Treat hypertx
Treat diabetes
Lower cholesterol
Anti-platelet drugs
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9
Q

What leads to platelet adhesion?

A

Endothelial damage exposing VWF and other proteins to which platelets have receptors

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10
Q

What leads to platelet aggregation?

A

Secretion of ADP and thromboxane A2

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11
Q

What receptor present on platelets will bind to VWF?

A

Glycoprotein 1b

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12
Q

What receptor present on platelets will allow them to stick together in platelet adhesion?

A

Glycoprotein 2b/3a

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13
Q

Why will platelets alter their shape once adhesion occurs?

A

Expose more phospholipid on surface to increased SA for coagulation activation and fibrin production

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14
Q

What is the mechanism of aspirin?

A

Inhibits cyclooxygenase which is necessary to produce thromboxane A2

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15
Q

What are the side effects to aspirin?

A

Bleeding

Due to blockage of prostaglandins; GI ulceration, bronchospasm, renal issues

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16
Q

What is the mechanism of clopidogrel and prasugrel?

A

ADP receptor (P2Y12) antagonists

17
Q

What is the mechanism of dipyridamole?

A

Phosphodiesterase inhibitor; reduced production of cAMP which is a “second messenger” in platelet activation

18
Q

What is the mechanism of abciximab?

A

Glycoprotein 2b/3a inhibitors preventing aggregation of platelets
Only really used in cardiac surgery

19
Q

What is the lifespan of a platelets?

A

7-10 days

20
Q

For how long before surgery should antiplatelets be stopped?

A

7 days

21
Q

What can be done in the event of serious bleeding due to anti-platelet use?

A

Platelet transfusion