Blood Clotting Pathways Flashcards

1
Q

What is haemostasis?

A

The arrest/halt of blood flow

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2
Q

How can this occur clinically?

A

After everyday trauma

e.g. injections, surgical incisions, tooth extractions etc.

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3
Q

What are the 3 major steps of haemostasis?

A
  1. Vascular spasm
  2. Formation of a platelet plug
  3. Blood coagulation (clotting)
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4
Q

Why must haemostasis be appropriately controlled?

A

To avoid inappropriate clot formation. Clots must be eventually degraded as they are only a temporary solution.

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5
Q

What happens during a vascular spasm?

A

VASOCONSTRICTION (contraction) of blood vessels occurs after injury:

  • Muscle cells contract
  • Constriction reduces blood flow, limits blood loss
  • Opposing endothelial surfaces are pressed together and adhere on contact.
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6
Q

What is the process of a vascular spasm mediated by?

A

This process is mediated by the platelet-derived products serotonin and thromboxane A2 (TXA2).

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7
Q

What does normal endothelium produce?

A

Normal endothelium produces vasodilators and inhibitors of platelet aggregation to keep vessels open.

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8
Q

What are platelets also known as?

A

Thrombocytes

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9
Q

What are platelets?

A

Platelets are small fragments derived from megakaryocytes (bone marrow cells)

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10
Q

What do platelets contain?

A

They contain:

  • megakaryocyte cytoplasm
  • intracellular granules
  • other organelles for generating energy
  • high concentrations of actin & myosin
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11
Q

What do the high concentrations of actin & myosin allow the platelets to do?

What else can platelets do?

A

These high concentrations allow platelets to contract

Platelets can also release secretory products

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12
Q

Under normal conditions, what do platelets not stick to?

A

Blood vessel endothelium.

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13
Q

What 4 chemical factors can activate platelets?

A
  1. ADP
  2. Collagen
  3. Thrombin
  4. PAF
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14
Q

What is PAF?

A

A phospholipid (not a protein)

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15
Q

What happens to the shape of platelets when they become activated?

What does this change in shape facilitate?

A

Disc shape to sphere shape with extended pseudopodia.

This change in shape facilitates aggregation and coagulant activity.

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16
Q

As well as changing shape, what 4 other effects does activation have on platelets?

A
  1. They release compounds involved in homeostasis (e.g. ADP, serotonin, fibronectin and von Willebrand Factor (vWF))
  2. They aggregate
  3. They adhere/stick to the vessel wall
  4. They synthesise thromboxane A2 (TXA2)
17
Q

What is thromboxane A2 (TXA2)?

A

A mediator of platelet activation and vasoconstriction.

18
Q

What is platelet activation followed by?

A

Their ADHESION to the vessel wall at the site of injury.

19
Q

What do the platelets do at the site of injury?

What does the product form?

A

The platelets AGGREGATE and build up an occlusive PLATELET MASS.

This mass forms the PRIMARY HAEMOSTATIC PLUG.

20
Q

When vasoconstriction eases, what may happen to the plug?

A

Plug may be washed away by local blood flow.

21
Q

What must the plug be stabilised by?

A

The plug must be stabilised by FIBRIN

22
Q

What are the two main steps of the formation of the Platelet Plug?

A
  1. Platelets aggregate to form a primary plug

2. Platelets release chemicals which enhance blood coagulation.

23
Q

When looking at platelet disorders and platelet-related bleeding disorders, what is the most common defect?

A

The most common defect is von Willebrand disease.

24
Q

What is von Willebrand disease?

A

A group of autosomal diseases affecting vWF

25
Q

What can some less common disorders affect?

A

Less common disorders can affect the receptors found in the platelet membrane, that are involved in platelet adhesion and aggregation.

26
Q

Normally bleeding stops because platelets stick together and form a clot. With vWD what happens to the platelets?

A

With vWD, platelets don’t stick together as they should.

27
Q

What are antiplatelet drugs used to treat?

A

Arterial thrombosis

blood clot within a vessel

28
Q

How do antiplatelet drugs work?

A

They decrease platelet aggregation and inhibit thrombus formation.

29
Q

Name 3 examples of anti platelet drugs.

A
  1. Aspirin
  2. Platelet receptor antagonists
  3. Platelet ADP receptor antagonists
30
Q

What does aspirin do?

A

Reduces thromboxane A2.

31
Q

What do platelet receptor antagonists do?

A

Targets GpIIb which binds vWF.

32
Q

What is the role of collagen in small blood vessels?

A

Collagen has an important role in the structure and function of small blood vessels.

33
Q

Identify vascular causes of excessive bleeding.

A

Congenital or acquired deficiencies in collagen synthesis

34
Q

Give an example of a congenital disorder.

A

Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome

35
Q

Give an example of an acquired disorder.

A

Vitamin C Deficiency
OR
excessive exogenous or endogenous Glucacorticoids (steroid hormones)

36
Q

What do blood coagulation factors interact to form?

A
  • The secondary, fibrin-rich, HAEMOSTATIC PLUG in small vessels
  • and the secondary fibrin THROMBUS in arteries and veins