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Disorders of the Proteins of Fibrin Formation. Inheritance of a defective geneFailure of synthesis of a hemostatic protein Malfunction or impaired moleculeAcquisition of a deficiency secondary to another conditionFibrin formation ineffective and slowed so patient presents with abnormal bleeding.
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1. Coagulation Disorders: Secondary Hemostasis MLAB 1227: CoagulationKeri Brophy-Martinez
3. Terms Quantitative: absence of a coagulation protein
Qualitative: Present in plasma but functionally defective
4. Lab Diagnosis: General PT prolonged
aPTT prolonged
Platelets normal
5. Patient Presentation Coagulation Factor Disorders Platelet Disorders Bleed from ruptured arterioles
Deep muscular & joint bleeding
Delayed bleeding
Ecchymoses
Hematuria
No petechiae Bleed from capillaries
Superficial bleeding
Acute bleeding
Ecchymoses
Hematuria
Petechiae
6. Factor VIII Deficiency Hemophilia A – classical hemophilia
Sex-linked recessive (carried by female, manifested in the male) causing a marked decrease in VIII:C (VIII:vWf is normal)
Deficiency of factor VIII portion of VIII/vWf complex
Patient has normal circulating vWf
Accounts for 80% of all hemophiliacs
Less than 5% Factor VIII activity
Results in symptoms of
Bleeding occurs with NO trauma or trivial injury
Spontaneous bleeding into joints, causes extreme pain and destroys cartilage of knees, elbows, ankles
Deep tissue hemorrhage – internally
Hematuria
CNS bleeding
PTT is greatly prolonged ( normal platelet function tests)
7. Factor VIII Deficiency Von Willebrand's Disease – lack of or defective VIII:vWF
Autosomal dominant – seen in both males and females
Most common inherited blood disorder
Mild to moderately low Factor VIII:vWF (5-15%). Factor VIII function is affected more than the quantity.
Platelet abnormalities – adhesiveness and aggregation, bleeding times
8. Von Willebrand's Disease Clinical Features Lab Diagnosis Mild bleeding in mucosal & cutaneous tissues
Easy bruising
Hallmark is variability of symptoms PTT prolonged
PT normal
Platelet count normal
BT abnormal
9. Factor IX Deficiency – Hemophilia B, Christmas Disease <20% of all hemophiliacs
Sex-linked recessive
No Factor IX function
Clinically indistinguishable from hemophilia A – must do special coag tests to distinguish
Can be acquired in coumadin therapy and liver disease
10. Factor XI Deficiency – Rosenthal's Disease or Hemophilia C <5% of all hemophiliacs
Autosomal recessive
Highest incidence in Jewish persons of Russian decent
Mucosal bleeding
Requires therapy only following childbirth or surgery
11. Congenital Disorders of the Other Factors The following factors are rarely deficient or defective to the extent that coagulation is slowed – I, II, V, VII, X, XII, XIII
Very rarely seen
Severity of bleeding dependent upon concentration of factor present
PK and HMWK disorders do exist but patients do not have bleeding tendencies.
Defective activation of the fibrinolytic system are seen;therefore an increased chance of thrombosis
PTT results are often markedly prolonged in these asymptomatic patients.
12. Acquired Coagulation Disorders Two or more factors generally affected
Bleeding from multiple sites
Usually result from underlying disease – “acquired”
Produced by a variety of conditions
Liver Disease
Impaired or abnormal synthesis of I, II, V, VII, IX and X, XI, XII, XIII, PK, HMWK (also AT III, the antiplasmins, plasminogen)
Enhanced destruction (primary fibrinolysis) of these factors
Vitamin K Deficiency – II, VII, IX and X (also Protein C and S)
Absence of vitamin K renders calcium binding sites nonfunctional
Sources are diet and intestinal bacterial flora
At birth, deficiency exists due to decreased production of factors since the liver is immature and absence of normal intestinal flora
DIC: see next slides
Pathologic Inhibitors: see next slides
13. DIC: Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation Consumption Coagulopathy
Coagulation Disorder
Thrombo-hemorrhagic disorder
Life threatening
Bleeding is the most apparent characteristic
Initiating events are thrombotic, where material enters circulation
Occurs due to lack of the negative feedback mechanism
14. DIC: Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation Pathological syndrome
Uncontrolled formation of fibrin clots in circulating blood
Small and large vessel thrombosis with impairment of blood flow and possible organ damage (systemic)
Activation of fibrinolytic system to break down the excessive clots. Large amounts of FDP formed due to large number of clots being broken down
Consumption of factors and platelets resulting in hemorrhage
Secondary complication of conditions which cause hyperactivation of the intrinsic or extrinsic coagulation systems
15. DIC Causes
Extrinsic activation
Obstetric – usually due to major tissue damage such as retained dead fetus, abruptio placentae, or placenta previa
Acute leukemias – Promyelocytic – increase number of granules released into circulation as cells break down
Intravascular hemolysis – ex: transfusion reaction
Massive trauma (especially crushing injuries), burns, surgical procedures
Heat stroke
Snake venoms
16. DIC: Causes con’t Causes
Intrinsic activation
Septicemias and infections – viral, bacterial, rickettsial, fungal, protozoan (especially gram negative that release endotoxins)
Tumors – foreign tissues and cells
Prosthetic devices – heart valves, aortic balloon, peritoneal shunting
Vascular disease – damaged endothelial lining
Snake venoms
17. DIC: How Does It Occur? Step 1: Out of control clotting
Causes widespread fibrin deposits in vessels of tissues and organs
Subsequent event: Hemorrhage
Clotting proteins consumed at a high rate
Causes multiple factor deficiencies, especially fibrinogen group
Platelets caught in thrombi and removed
18. DIC: How Does It Occur? Step 2: Triggers Fibrinolytic system to remove fibrin
Results in:
Circulating degradation products that interfere with platelet function & normal clot formation
Degradation of Factor V & VIII
19. DIC: How Does It Occur? Step 3: Uncontrolled plasmin and thrombin enter circulation
Why?
Inhibitors such as ATIII have been depleted
20. DIC: How Does It Occur? Step 4: Appearance of Symptoms
Bleeding from multiple sites
Petechiae
Purpura
Occlusions in organs
Oozing from arterial lines, venipuncture sites
21. DIC No one specific test for DIC, but FDP is the most helpful
Lab values
platelet count: decreased
PT: increased
PTT : increased
Fibrinogen: decreased
FDP /D-dimer: positive
RBC fragments: present
ATIII : decreased
22. DIC Treatment
Goal is to treat the underlying condition
Remove the triggering process – treat with antibiotics, antineoplasms, remove dead tissue, treat the diseases or conditions
Heparin – to prevent or limit further coagulation
Replace factors, platelets = give FFP
23. Acquired Coagulation Disorders: Pathologic Inhibitors Develop in patients with certain disease states and others with no underlying conditions
Circulating anticoagulants which may develop against any clotting factor
Classed as immunoglobulins
Either IgG or IgM
Can be alloantibodies or autoantibodies
Not normally synthesized by the body, bind with the factors making them unavailable for use in the cascade
24. Types of Inhibitors Directed against a single coagulation factor
Seen in patients with inherited factor deficiencies that have had replacement therapy for bleeding complications
Less commonly seen in healthy people and those taking certain drugs
Rare, except Factor VIII & IX
How do we find them?
Interfere with clotting factor activity
PTT prolonged, other tests normal
Mixing study: test will still be prolonged
25. Types of Inhibitors Lupus Inhibitor/Anticoagulant
Seen in patients with autoimmune diseases, drug reactions, but also in normal patients
Antibodies do not bind coag factors, but interfere with phospholipid-dependent reagents used in coag lab tests
Patients have no in vivo bleeding problems (though some have an increase risk of thrombosis)
In vitro, any coag test using a phospholipid reagent will be falsely prolonged (PT, PTT)
Coag studies must be performed using reagents that do not contain phospholipids