Coagulation - Exam 4 Flashcards
(118 cards)
Normal hemostasis is a balance between what 3 things?
clot generation
thrombus formation
regulatory mechanisms that inhibit uncontrolled thrombogenesis
What are the 3 goals of hemostasis?
- to limit blood loss from vascular injury
- maintain intravascular blood flow
- promote revascularization after thrombosis
What are the 2 stages of hemostasis?
Primary
Secondary
Explain primary hemostasis
Immediateplatelet deposition at the endovascular injury site
- Leads to the initial platelet plug formation
- Only adequate for minor injury
Explain secondary hemostasis
clotting factors activated
- Stabilized clot formed and secured with crosslinked fibrin
Vascular endothelial cells have ____, _____, and _____ effects to inhibit clot formation
Antiplatelet
Anticoagulant
FIbrolytic
Explain anti-clotting mechanisms of endothelial cells
- are negatively charged to repel platelets
- produce platelet inhibitors such as prostacyclin and nitric oxide
- excrete adenosine diphosphatase, which degrades adenosine diphosphate (ADP), a platelet activator
- increase protein C, an anticoagulant
- produce Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor (TFPI), which inhibits factor Xa & TF-VIIa complex
- Synthesize tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA)
Platelets play a critical role in ______ and are derived from what?
Hemostasis
bone-marrow megakaryocytes
Inactive plts circulate as _____ - shaped _____ cells with a lifespan of ______ days
Disc-shaped anuclear cells
8-12 days
Normally, approx ___% of platelets are consumed to support vascular integrity with _____ billion new platelets formed daily
10%
120-150
T/F
The platelet membrane contains numerous receptors and a surface canalicularsystem, which increases membrane surface area
True
Damage to endothelium exposes the underlying _____ _____, which contains ______, ______, and other _____
Extracellular matrix
Contains
- collagen
- vWF
- other glycoproteins
Upon exposure to contents in the ECM, platelets undergo what 3 phases of alteration?
adhesion
activation
aggregation
When does adhesion occur?
occurs upon exposure to ECM proteins
When is activation stimulated?
when platelet interacts w/collagen & tissue factor (TF), causing the release of granular contents
Plts contain what 2 types of storage granules? What are they?
Alpha granules: contain fibrinogen, factors V & VIII, vWF, Plt-derived growth factor & more
Dense bodies: contain ADP, ATP, calcium, serotonin, histamine, epinephrine
When does aggregation occur?
when the granular contents are released, which activate additional platelets, propagating plasma-mediated coagulation
Each stage of the clotting cascade requires assembly of membrane-bound activated tenase-complexes
- each complex is composed of what 4 things?
1) a substrate (inactive precursor)
2) an enzyme (activated coagulation factor)
3) a cofactor (accelerator or catalyst
4) calcium
Clotting cascade picture
Other clotting cascade picture
The Extrinsic pathway is the initiation phase of what?
plasma-mediated hemostasis
Explain extrinsic pathway
Begins endothelial injury, exposing TF to the plasma
TF forms an active complex with VIIa (TF/VIIa complex)
TF/VIIa complex binds to and activates factor X, converting it to Xa
TF/VIIa complex also activates IX→ IXa in the intrinsic pathway
- IXaand calcium convert factor X to Xa (intrinsic pathway)
Factor Xa begins the final common pathway
With intrinsic pathway (beginning with factor ____), it was initially thought to occur only in response to endovascular contact with ___________ (glass, dextran)
XIIa
negatively-charged substances
Current understanding is the intrinsic pathway plays a minor role in _______ and is more an ______ system to propagate ______ generation initiated by the extrinsic pathway
Imitation of hemostasis
Amplification system
Thrombin generation