Hemophelia A (classic hemophelia) Flashcards

1
Q

Definition

A
  • Sex-linked recessive coagulation defect due to deficiency of factor VIII-C
  • 20% of cases are new mutations.
  • Hemophilia A represents 80% of all hemophiliacs
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2
Q

Pathophysiology

A
  • Factor VIII-C is synthesized by the liver and reticuloendothelial system
  • In plasma, factor VIII-C is stabilized and protected from degradation by Von Willebrand factor(vWF) protein
  • In the presence of normal vWF, the half-life of factor VIII-C is approximately 12 hours, whereas in the absence of vWF, the half-life of factor VIII-C is reduced to 2 hours
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3
Q

Pattern of deficiency

A
  • Hemostatic level of F VIII-C is >30- 40U/L (30-40%); below which bleeding occur
  • Plasma level of Factor VIII-C in carrier females is between 30-50 %
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4
Q

Clinical picture

A

Severe disease→F8 <1% → bleed spontaneously
-moderate → F8 1-5% → Bleed with minor

trauma
Mild disease → 5-25% → Bleed with severe

trauma

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5
Q

Con the clinical picture

A
  1. In neonate Unusual bleeding from the circumcision site or umbilical stump
  2. External bleeding e.g.
    Epistaxis
    • Dental /mouth bleeding
    • GIT bleeding Hematuria
  3. Skin bleeding
    • Easy bruising
    • Ecchymotic patches Hematomas
    • No petechaie
  4. Hemarthrosis🌚 target joint
    • The hallmark of hemophilia A and B
    • Affects mainly the big joints of the lower limbs
    • Affected joint become swollen, red, hot, and tender with limited mobility
    • Tend to be recurrent
    • Recurrent hemarthrosisp joint fibrosis / ankylosis & muscle atrophy
  5. Internal bleeding e.g.
    • Muscle hematoma Intracranial Retroperitoneal Hemothorax
    -
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6
Q

Inv for both

A

 PTT is prolonged 2-3 times above the normal range, whereas other

screening tests are usually normal (including PT).

 Mixing study is positive.

 Specific F8 or F9 assay is used to confirm the Dx.

 Hemophilia carriers (e.g. other family members) can be screened by

Genetic studies or F8:VWF ratio.

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7
Q

Tx

A

Nelson

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8
Q

Tranexamic acid

A

Antifibrinolytics
- 1g loading in 10 min the 1g maintenance in 8 h
For truma in first 3 h

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9
Q

Complications of hemophilia

A

A. Due to bleeding

  • Hemophilic arthropathypjoint stiffness & Muscle atrophy
  • Severe intracranial hemorrhage.
  • Severe blood lossp hypovolemic shock

B. Complications of transfusion (See chronic transfusion in thalassemia )

C. Complications of factor VIII therapy

  1. Hypersensitivity reactions
  2. Factor VIII inhibitors (Antibodies)
  • Develop in about 5-10 %
  • Hemorrhage become refractory to treatment
  • Inhibitors (measured by Bethesda Units) should be screened for annually
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10
Q

Hemophelia B (Christmas disease)

A
  • Factor IX deficiency.
  • Incidence: 1 / 50.000(in contrast to hemophelia A which is 1 / 10.000)
  • Sex-linked recessive disorder.
  • As hemophelia A but milder.
  • Treated by: Recombinant factor IX or factor IX concentrate given/24 hours.
  • Prophylactic treatment: Recombinant factor IX twice a week.
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11
Q

Hemophelia C

A
  • Factor XI deficiency.
  • Autosomal recessive disorder so can affect both sexes.
  • Very mild disease.
  • Treated by fresh frozen plasma given / 48 hours.
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