W8CL2 - Disorders of Platelets Flashcards

1
Q

Measurement of Platelets - Siemens Advia 120

A
Classified by size & refractive index
Categories:
- platelets
- large platelets
- (RBC ghosts, RBC fragments, debris)
Good differentiation from RBC
Micro-aggregates (3-4 platelets) of platelets may be identified/reported as large platelets
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2
Q

Platelet Flags - LRI and URI

A
LRI
- lower region interference
- very small structures
- debris, microbubbles, bacteria, etc.
URI
- upper region interference
- region of overlap between small RBC and large platelets
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3
Q

Von Willebrand Factor

A

VWF is a protein that is assembled from identical subunits into linear ‘strings’
When vascular injury occurs, VWF becomes tethered to the exposed area
Conformational change in VWF promotes platelets to adhere, become activated, and then aggregate
Von Willebrand disease (VWD) is an inherited disorder of coagulation characterised by a quantitative or qualitative abnormality of VWF
Von Willebrand Disease is not a disorder of platelets
However, quantitative or qualitative disorders of VWF will compromise platelet function

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4
Q

Von Willebrand Disease

A
The clinical signs of VWD are very similar clinical signs to platelet disorders 
Classification of VWD:
Type 1
- partial quantitative deficiency of VWF
Type 2
- qualitative deficiency of VWF
- includes fours sub-types (A, B, M, N)
Type 3
- virtually complete deficiency of VWF
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5
Q

Thrombocytosis

A

Thrombocytosis is typically discovered as an incidental finding in a FBC
Thrombocytosis either:
- is caused by a clonal bone marrow (myeloproliferative) disorder e.g. essential thrombocythaemia (ET)
- or a reactive process (secondary thrombocytosis)

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6
Q

Secondary Thrombocytosis

A

[Platelet] > 500 x 10^9/L
The most frequent underlying causes:
- tissue damage due to major surgery, infection, cancer, and chronic inflammation

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7
Q

Thrombocytopenia

A
Decreased concentration of platelets
Haemorrhage is typically petechial/purpural
Haemorrhage may occur at:
- less than 10 x 10^9/L; commonly occurs
- 20-30 x 10^9/L; may occur
- 100 x 10^9/L; may occur with haemostatic challenge (e.g. surgery)
3 general mechanisms
- decreased production
- altered distribution
- increased destruction
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8
Q

Thrombocytopenia - Decreased Production

A
Decreased [platelet] in the peripheral blood
Decreased numbers of megakaryocytes in the bone marrow
Many causes:
1. Marrow damage
- aplasia
- drugs/toxins
- neoplasia
2. Congenital defects
- Fanconi anaemia
- May-Hegglin anomaly
- Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome
3. Ineffective production
- B12/Folate deficiency
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9
Q

Thrombocytopenia - Altered Distribution

A

Platelets available for haemostasis include circulating pool & ‘exchangeable’ pool of platelets in the spleen
Typically comprise ~ 1/3 of total platelets
Conditions => splenomegaly => platelet sequestration
Typically not below 40 x 10^9/L

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10
Q

Thrombocytopenia - Increased Destruction (Immune and Non-Immune Causes)

A

Non-immune
- disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
- haemolytic-uraemic syndrome (HUS)
- thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
Immune
- drug induced thrombocytopenia
- heparin induced thrombocytopenia (HIT)
- idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)
- secondary to other disorders (e.g. viral disease, SLE)

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11
Q

Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

A

Non-immune mechanism
Clotting proteins, inhibitors & platelets are consumed faster than they are synthesized
=> ‘consumptive coagulopathy’
- acquired deficiency of multiple hemostatic components
- fibrinolysis follows fibrin formation
- patient generally bleeds at same time that disseminated clotting is occurring
Many inciting causes
- e.g. sepsis, massive trauma

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12
Q

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)

A

Non-immune mechanism
Microangiopathic destruction of platelets
Low grade fever, microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia, schistocytosis
DIC screen otherwise normal
May be congenital; sporadic/idiopathic; or following drug therapy
Increased platelet destruction occurs following platelet ‘activation’
The congenital & sporadic forms of TTP occurs due to ↓ vWF cleaving protein (ADAMTS13)
Assay of ADAMTS13 is used to support diagnosis

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13
Q

Immune-Mediated Thrombocytopenia in Adults

A

Mechanism: effected through destruction of platelets
Typically: decreased [platelet] in the PB with ‘normal’/increased megakaryocytes in the BM
Many causes:
1. Association with drugs
- e.g. quinidine; act as hapten to incite antibody formation
2. Association with heparin (HIT)
- several forms
- type I; passive binding of heparin; transient, mild
- type II; form antibodies to heparin-platelet factor 4 complex
- => ↑ clearance of platelets

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14
Q

Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura

A

Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) is characterised by decreased platelet production & premature destruction of autoantibody-coated platelets => thrombocytopenia
Thrombocytopenia can persist for months to years
Generally, patients require treatment if:
- they are bleeding
- low platelet counts (<20 × 10^9/L)
- prior to scheduled surgical procedures
ITP can present either alone (primary) or in the setting of other conditions (secondary), such as infections or altered immune states
ITP is associated with a loss of tolerance to platelet antigens => accelerated platelet destruction & impaired platelet production

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15
Q

Post Viral Thrombocytopenia

A
Most commonly observed in children
1-2 weeks post-viral infection
- rubella, rubeola, chickenpox, respiratory viral infections
- may also be incited by live vaccines
Widespread petechiae, purpura
Platelets < 100 x 10^9/L
↑ ‘reticulated’ platelets
Bone marrow; normal to ↑ megakaryocytes
Diagnosis usually clinical
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16
Q

Acquired Platelet Disorders

A
Drugs
Haematopoietic neoplasia
- myeloproliferative disorders (MPD)
- myelodysplasia (MD)
- renal failure
- valve disease
- paraproteinaemia
- ITP with platelet dysfunction
17
Q

May-Hegglin Anomaly

A

Most common of the giant platelet syndromes
Autosomal dominant inheritance
Point mutation in MYH9 gene
Giant platelets & thrombocytopenia (50-100 x 10^9/L)
Neutrophil inclusions (similar to Döhle bodies)
Mild bleeding disorder

18
Q

Bernard Soulier Syndrome

A
Autosomal recessive disorder
Giant platelets
Deficiency platelet surface receptor GP Ib (part of GP –Ib-V-IX complex)
↓ platelet-vWF binding
=> ineffective aggregation
=> mucocutaneous haemorrhage, purpura
Abnormal ristocetin aggregation*
No neutrophil inclusions* 
(* distinguish from May-Hegglin anomaly)
19
Q

Glanzmann’s Thrombasthenia

A

Rare
Autosomal recessive disorder
Deficiency platelet surface receptor GP IIb/IIIa
Required for fibrin dependent platelet-platelet interactions
Platelet number & morphology
are normal
Platelets fail to aggregate with normal agonists
- ADP, collagen, thrombin

20
Q

Platelets and Inflammation

A

Platelets can initiate antimicrobial host defence by sensing the presence of pathogens or inflammation
They can then recognize and bind to invading pathogens and/or their derived microbial products
Platelet granules contain substances involved in inflammation than can be released to promote an inflammatory response

21
Q

Platelet Functions in Inflammation

A

Platelet-bacteria interactions can either be:
- direct by bacterial surface proteins binding to a platelet
- indirect through bacteria interacting with a plasma protein
Platelet surface receptors like GPIb, TLR2 & TLR4 are involved in direct platelet-bacteria interactions
Plasma proteins like fibrinogen & vWF enable indirect interactions
Platelets can also involve Kupffer cells, neutrophils & the complement system

22
Q

Platelets and Wound Healing

A

Restoration of the vascular wall involves orchestrated proliferation and migration of smooth muscle cells (SMCs), fibroblasts and endothelial cells
Platelet derived growth factors contribute to these processes
Platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) in particular is instrumental in regulating SMC proliferation and migration in both the arterial and venous circulation
Also important is stromal cell-derived factor 1 SDF-1α (CXCL12) which mediates CD34+ bone marrow derived progenitor cell recruitment to the injury site and their differentiation into endothelial progenitor cells