Haematostasis and Thrombosis in Practice: Clinical Cases Haemostasis and Thrombosis Flashcards

1
Q

Case 1:

  • A 20 month old boy attends accident and emergency with his father
  • The child has refused to walk for the past 2 days having been walking unsupported for 4 months
  • The right knee is slightly swollen and feels warm to touch
  • Blood is aspirated from the knee

Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia

B. Osteomyelitis

C. Von Willebrand Disease

D. Haemophilia A

A

•Diagnosis is most likely haemophilia

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2
Q

Case 1:

•How do you differentiate between haemophilia A and haemophilia B?

A. Measure the APTT

B. Measure the PT

C. Measure factor VIII and IX levels

D. Do a platelet count

A

•Measure the factor VIII or IX level

Clinical presentation of A and B is the same and depends on residual levels of factor 8 and 9 in the circulation

Platelet count will most likely be normal so doesn’t tell you anything

Top 2 tests are screening tests of coagulation – measure deficiencies in coagulation factors – both of these are very non-specific measures

Many thing prolong APTT including both haemophilia A and B. Many thing prolong PT time

Answer is C – can tell clearly between them

Comes down to what has highest frequencies in population – haemophilia A (factor 8 deficiency) is 5 times more common than haemophilia B

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3
Q

Case 1:

  • Diagnosis is most likely severe haemophilia A
  • Patients factor VIII level was 0%
  • Patients factor IX level was 73%
  • How is haemophilia A inherited?

A. Autosomal Recessive

B. X-linked

C. Y-linked

D. Autosomal Dominant

A

B

No affected women - X-linked

In a carrier a Women has a normal X to balance the abnormal one so they have normal coagulation factors but a male doesn’t have a normal X to balance it out

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4
Q

what pattern of inheritance is shown here?

A

This may be the pattern of vWF disease in a family

Equal numbers of men and women affected and unaffected

No skipping of generation (you may see skipping in X-linked conditions)

Autosomal dominant

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5
Q

Case 1:

•The mother tells you that her father also has haemophilia A and wants to know the chances of haemophilia in any further children born to her

Daughters of affected man with haemophilia have to have the affected genes on one of their chromosomes so obligate carriers

She has one normal and one abnormal X and partner has normal X and normal Y

•What is the chance of any further child having haemophilia A?

A. 1 in 2

B. Can’t say because it depends on the mothers status

C. 1 in 4

D. Random chance – not quantifiable

A

•The chance is 1 in 4 as the mother is an obligate carrier of haemophilia

1 in 4 chance of affected boy

1 in 4 chance of unaffected boy

1 in 4 of carrier girl

1 in 4 of girl who is not a carrier

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6
Q

Case 1:

•Having established the diagnosis of severe haemophilia A with a joint bleed, what optimal treatment should you give?

A. Fresh frozen plasma

B. Plasma derived Factor VIII

C. DDAVP and tranexamic acid

D. Recombinant factor VIII

A

D. Recombinant factor VIII

DDAVP – natural analogue of vasopressin, not used for all haemophilic bleeding – can raise factor 8 levels but only for people with mild haemophilia

3 options contain some factor 8

A – contains small amount of factor 8 but also every other factor – would need a large volume

B – concentrate of factor 8 and its plasma derived and this is the issue. Plasma is from thousands of donors so infection is more likely

Where there is a recombinant product this should be used over a plasma derived one

When possible avoid the blood donor as be aware of risk you are putting the patient at in regards to transfusion (not just factor 8 or 9, blood cells and other things aswell)

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7
Q

Case 1:

  • The father is concerned about the boy receiving factor VIII because of infections in his father –in-law related to factor VIII treatment
  • Which of these is not a complication of plasma derived factor VIII treatment?

A. Hepatitis B

B. HIV

C. Hepatitis C

D. Hepatitis A

A

Hepatitis A is very rare as not a chronic virus

•Hepatitis A is not transmitted by concentrate

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8
Q

Case 1:

•What is the other main complication of treatment of severe haemophilia A with factor VIII concentrates?

One is blood borne infection the other is what?

A. Allergic reactions

B. Increased risk of thrombosis

C. Development of inhibitory antibodies

D. Addiction to factor VIII

A

C

•Biggest complication is development of inhibitory antibodies (About 20% of cases)

In 25% of boys with haemophilia have never seen factor 8 so when they see it for the first time when they are treated, 25-30% will go on to develop an inhibitory antibody so antibody binds to infused factor 8 and stops it working and this is not a good outcome and then you continue to bleed

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9
Q

Case 1:

  • The boy should be treated with recombinant factor VIII
  • What is the best treatment regimen for these patients?

A. Treat the patient as soon as possible only after he has a bleed

B. Give factor VIII regularly once weekly

C. Give factor VIII at least 3 times weekly

D. Give factor VIII every day

E. Consider bone marrow transplantation

A

Want to convert severe patient into mild patients

Give factor 8 regularly enough, what to keep level at 3,4, 5%

Once a week is not frequently enough, 3 times a week will just about cover it but small dose ever day is better

Pegalyted factor 8 or 9 and this extends half life

With these new molecules you can get away with giving it once every week or once every 2 weeks

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10
Q

Case 2:

  • A 24 year old female student presents with a 4 day history of easy bruising and small red spots on her ankles
  • She has no previous history of abnormal bleeding
  • Previous tonsillectomy with no bleeding
  • Recently been off colour with flu like symptoms
  • Only medication COCP

If you push this it doesn’t blanch - petechiae

•What are these non-blanching spots on her arms?

A. Spider naevi

B. Bruises

C. Petechiae

D. Telangectasia

A

C

•They are petechiae

A and D both blanch, small blood vessels you force the blood out of and the blood flows back in after

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11
Q

Case 2:

•Which of these symptoms is she unlikely to have

A. Menorrhagia

B. Swollen, hot painful leg

C. Epistaxis

D. Buccal bleeding

A
  • She has petechiae, menorrhagia, epistaxis easy bruising, and blood blisters in her mouth
  • She is least likely to have a swollen leg

A yes

C yes

D blood blusters in mouth – yes

Unlikely to have painful swollen legs – don’t get bleeding into muscles of joints in thrombocytopenia

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12
Q

Case 2:

•What is the likely cause of her symptoms?

A. Thrombocytopenia

B. Scurvy

C. Vitamin K deficiency

D. Liver failure

A

A - Post infection thrombocytopenia

•She has thrombocytopenia as a cause of the symptoms

These could all the associated with it

B - Scurvy – unlikely – deficient in vitamin C – loss vascular integrity and patient bleed

C – usually find this in green veg but this is a fat soluble vitamin so to absorb you need to emulsify it and this is done by bile from the gallbladder and then you can absorb vitamin K

If someone has biliary tree disease – stones, cancer – then you may get vitamin K deficiency

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13
Q

Case 2:

•Which of the following is not a cause of thrombocytopenia

A. Acute myeloid leukaemia

B. Vitamin K deficiency

C. Aplastic anaemia

D. ITP

A

•AML, Aplastic Anaemia, ITP, may all cause thrombocytopenia. Vit K deficiency does not

Either due to underproduction or increased destruction of platelets

If bone marrow fails like in A

Aplastic anaemia – bone marrow replaced with fat – bone marrow failure

Don’t get it in B so that’s the answer

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14
Q

Case 2:

•This patient has spontaneous bruising and petechiae formation which platelet count is most likely?

A. 30

B. 10

C. 50

D. 100

A

•Answer is 10

Spontaneous bleedings and stuff happens when count is down around 10

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15
Q

Case 2:

•Which underlying illness is not associated with ITP?

A. HIV infection

B. Vitamin C deficiency

C. SLE

D. Glandular fever

A

•Vitamin C deficiency is not associated with thrombocytopenia. SLE, EBV and HIV infection are

Propensity to having other autoimmune diseases

Can see in acute viral infection like D but can also see it in A

Cross reactivity to virus and hitting platelets at the same time

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16
Q

Case 3:

  • A 70 year old man has excessive bleeding after a colectomy for cancer
  • He has bleeding from his abdominal wound but not from his drain or his indwelling line
  • He has had surgery in the past but had no abnormal bleeding
  • Which is the most likely cause of this?

A. Severe haemophilia A

B. Von Willebrand Disease

C. LMWH prophylaxis

D. Poor surgical technique

A

•Most likely surgical bleeding (single site does not suggest coagulopathic bleeding.

Don’t get to 70 with A, most likely 2 or 3 years old

B would have had bleeding after had prostate done

C do get prophylactic heparin but would likely to of seen it more than one side

D probably this answer

Look at past medical history

17
Q

Case 3:

•Which of the following was not the reason the patient was given LMWH for thromboprophylaxis?

A. Surgery

B. Old age

C. Hypertension

D. Active cancer

A

•The hypertension. All of the others identify risk factors for peri-op VTE

All people getting surgery have increased risk of pulmonary embolism and DVT in the peri surgical period so all should get something as prophylaxis to prevent this like LMWH

He also had it due to old age as again another risk factor for developing a DVT

Active cancer is a risk factor for developing venous thromboembolism and is an indication for prophylaxis

C is not an indication

18
Q

Case 4:

•A 65 year old man takes aspirin because of a previous history of TIA. How does aspirin work?

A. It inhibits thrombin

B. It reduces platelet aggregation

C. Inhibits coagulation factor production

D. Inhibits vitamin D

A

•Aspirin inhibits platelet function by inhibiting COX-1

19
Q

Case 4:

•Which of these drugs does not inhibit platelet function?

A. Clopidogrel

B. Dabigatran

C. Abciximab

D. Ticagrelor

A

A - P2Y12

D – newer on and off inhibitor of same pathway as Clopidogrel

20
Q

Case 5:

  • A 21-year old medical student uses the combined oral contraceptive. She is clinically well
  • Which of the following is true?

A. She has an increased risk of stroke

B. She has a reduced risk of pulmonary embolism

C. She may bleed more easily from injuries

D. She has a family history of her mother and sisters suffering from pulmonary embolus

A
  • She has an increased risk of stroke and VTE
  • Her relative risk of venous thromboembolism is approx. 5x
  • Her absolute risk of thrombosis is low however
21
Q

Case 5:

•Which of the following could be present and contribute further to her VTE risk?

A. Hypercholesterolaemia

B. Factor V Leiden

C. Von Willebrand factor deficiency

D. Diabetes Mellitus

A
  • Factor V Leiden increases VTE 5x
  • In combination with COCP RR=30
  • She has an episode of proximal DVT
22
Q
A
23
Q
A
24
Q

Choose the correct answers:

The following are risk factors for arterial thromboembolism

A. Smoking

B. Diabetes mellitus

C. Factor V Leiden

D. Atrial fibrillation

A
25
Q

Choose the incorrect answer:

Arterial thrombus

A. Is platelet rich

B. Most frequently develops on a ruptured/ulcerated plaque

C. May cause pulmonary embolism

D. Results in tissue infarction

A
26
Q

Choose the correct answer:

DIC

A. Is shorthand for ‘Death is Coming’

B. Is a spontaneous disorder of coagulation

C. Typically results in deep vein thrombosis in the lower limbs

D. Causes tissue infarction due to microvascular thrombosis

A
27
Q

Choose the incorrect answer:

DIC may complicate

A. Metastatic cancer

B. Normal pregnancy

C. Severe burns

D. Septic shock

A