Title: Bleeding and Thrombosis in the Surgical Patient Bronx
1Bleeding and Thrombosis in the Surgical
PatientBronx Veterans Affairs Medical
CenterSurgery and Gastroenterology Grand
RoundsOctober 30, 2003
- Donald Baril
- Department of Surgery
- Mount Sinai School of Medicine
2Hemostasis
- Hemostatic response consists of three primary
elements - 1) Vasoconstriction
- 2) Platelet aggregation
- 3) Clotting cascade
3Hemostasis
- Vasoconstriction
- ? occurs as a result of vessel injury
- ? limits flow of blood to the area of injury
- ? enhanced by vasoconstricting elements
released from platelets (primarily thromboxane
A2) - ? reflex sympathetic vasoconstriction may
result from pain -
4Hemostasis
- Platelet aggregation
- ? platelets are activated by thrombin and
aggregate at the site of injury to form a
temporary platelet plug - ? platelets adhere to damaged endothelium via
von Willebrand factor - ? bridges GPIb/IX and collagen fibrils
- ? aggregating platelets release ADP, TXA2
adenosine- 5-diphosphate, serotonin,
phospholipids and other proteins necessary for
the coagulation cascade
5Hemostasis
- Clotting cascade
- ? consists of two semi-independent pathways
- ? intrinsic pathway initiated when contact is
made between blood and exposed endothelial
tissues (relatively slow approximately 2-6
minutes) - ? extrinsic pathway is triggered by vessel or
tissue damage which leads to the exposure of
tissue factor (fast approximately 15 seconds) - ? both pathways lead to the activation of
prothrombin (factor II) - ? final common pathway converts fibrinogen to
fibrin
6Clotting cascade
7Natural inhibitors of the coagulation cascade
- ? Thrombomodulin
- ? Antithrombin III
- ? Tissue factor pathway inhibitor
- ? Protein C
- ? Protein S
8Natural inhibitors of the coagulation cascade
9Natural inhibitors of the coagulation cascade
- Thrombomodulin is a potent inhibitor of thrombin
- Binds thrombin and inhibits its ability to cleave
fibrinogen or active factors V and VII - Enhances thrombins ability to activate protein
C, which degrades factors V and VIII
10Natural inhibitors of the coagulation cascade
- Antithrombin III is a large protease inhibitor
that inhibits thrombin and factors IXa, Xa, XIa,
and XIIa but does not inhibit thrombin within
clots - ? Heparin accelerates the reaction time of
- antithrombin III 1000 fold
11Natural inhibitors of the coagulation cascade
- ? Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI)
- ? Protein with three tandem protease inhibitory
domains - ? Inhibits Factor Xa and the Factor VIIa-Tissue
Factor - Complex
- ? Bound to lipoproteins (LDL, HDL, lipoprotein
A) - ? Platelets carry about 10 of the TFPI
- ? Heparin enhances the function of TFPI 2-4
fold.
12Natural inhibitors of the coagulation cascade
- ? Protein C and Protein S
- ? Vitamin K-dependent serine proteases
synthesized - in the liver
- ? Circulate as inactive forms (zymogens)
- ? Protein C
- ? inhibits the activity of factors Va and
VIIIa - ? Protein S
- ? cofactor that potentiates the action of
Protein C
13Preoperative screening for bleeding risk
- ? Complete history and physical
14Preoperative screening for bleeding risk
- ? Incidence of a significant hereditary
deficiency of a coagulation factor is low (1 per
10,000-40,000) - ? approximately 1/3 of these are asymptomatic
- ? Acquired deficiencies of factors should be
suspected in the presence of advance hepatic
disease, malabsorption, or malnutrition
15Clinical testing and preoperative screening
- ? Prothrombin time (PT)
- ? measure extrinsic and common pathways
- ? affected by low concentrations of fibrinogen,
prothrombin and factors II, V, VII, X -
- ? Activated partial thomboplastin time (aPTT)
- ? measures intrinsic and common pathways
- ? deficiencies in all clotting factors except
factors VII and XIII may prolong the aPTT
16Clinical testing and preoperative screening
- ? PT and aPTT testing involves adding activators,
- phospholipids, and calcium to plasma and
determining - the time to clot formation
- ? Abnormalities result from
- ? factor deficiencies in the coagulation
cascade - ? excess of calcium
- ? inadequately filled collection tubes
- ? excessive tourniquet time
- ? hemolyzed or clotted samples
- ? prolonged time from sample collection to
testing
17Assessment of platelet function
- ? Platelet count
- ? reproducible, but fails to assess platelet
function - ? Bleeding time
- ? highly technician-dependent
- ? poor screening test for preoperative
hemorrhage - ? fails to discriminate between those taking ASA
and those who are not - ? Platelet function analyzer
- ? quantitative test of platelet function at high
sheer rates - ? sensitive to impairment of vWF, inhibition of
glycoprotein Ib or IIb/IIIa receptors and
ASA-induced dysfunction
18Is preoperative testing useful?
- ? Houry et al. American Journal of Surgery July
1995 - ? Multicenter prospective study of 3242
patients undergoing general surgery procedures - ? High-risk patients defined as those with
- ? easy/excessive bruising
- ? heavy or prolonged menstrual periods
- ? epistaxis
- ? GI/GU bleeding
- ? prolonged bleeding after cuts/previous
surgery - ? hemophilia or other inherited hemorrhagic
disorder - ? renal failure, liver disease, hypersplenism,
collagen vascular disease - ? purpura, hematomas, jaudince, signs of liver
failure on physical exam -
19Is preoperative testing useful?
- Low-risk patients with normal test results (PT,
aPTT, platelet count, and bleeding time) - 0.15 of 1951 pts died of bleeding
- 4.6 had bruising
- 3.0 had hematomas
- 0.46 required reoperation to control
hemorrhage - Low-risk patients with abnormal test results
- 0 of 340 pts died of bleeding
- 5.9 had bruising
- 2.9 had hematomas
- 0.59 required reoperation to control
hemorrhage - Houry et al. Am J Surg July 1995
20Is preoperative testing useful?
- High-risk patients with normal test results (PT,
aPTT, platelet count, and bleeding time) - 0 of 779 pts died of bleeding
- 8.3 had bruising
- 3.5 had hematomas
- 1.16 required reoperation to control
hemorrhage - High-risk patients with abnormal test results
- 1.16 of 340 pts died of bleeding
- 10.5 had bruising
- 6.4 had hematomas
- 1.16 required reoperation to control
hemorrhage - Houry et al. Am J Surg July 1995
21Preoperative screening to assess risk of
thrombosis
- ? Acquired causes of thrombophilia
- ? cancer
- ? antiphospholipid antibodies
- ? nephrotic syndrome
- ? hyperhomocystinemia
- ? Heritable causes of thrombophilia
- ? factor V Leiden mutation
- ? protein C deficiency
- ? protein S deficiency
- ? antithrombin III deficiency
-
22Factor V Leiden mutation (activated protein C
resistance)
- ? Inactivation of normal Factor Va occurs through
an - ordered series of cleavages at arginine
residues - ? In APC resistance, the arginine at position 506
is substituted - with glutamine rendering the Factor Va
molecule resistant to - cleavage by APC
- ? Thrombosis occurs because this altered Factor
Va still has the same procoagulant activity as
normal Factor Va - ? Present in 1.25-6 of the U.S. population
- ? 25-40 of patients with this mutation have a
family history of thrombosis - ? 7.9 fold increased risk for thrombosis
23Protein C deficiency
- ? Congenital deficiency of Protein C
- ? Causes of acquired deficiency of protein C
- ? DVT, PE ? Acute DIC
- ? Post-operative State ? Severe liver
disease - ? Malignancy ? Infection
- ? ARDS
- ? Hemolytic-uremic syndrome
- ? Vitamin K Deficiency and/or Warfarin use
24Protein S deficiency
- ? Congenital deficiency of protein S
- ? Type I - Decreased free Protein S, but
adequate bound levels. - ? Type II - Decreased free and bound Protein S
- ? 50 will have first thrombotic event before
age 25 -
- ? Causes of acquired deficiency of protein C
- ? DVT/PE.
- ? warfarin use
- ? pregnancy, both free and bound Protein S is
decreased.
25Antithrombin III deficiency
- ? Results from a defect in the synthesis of AT
- ? May also result from increases consumption of
AT DIC, DVT, PE - ? Thrombotic events occur with AT activity at
40-60 of normal
26Preoperative screening to assess risk of
thrombosis
- Testing for thrombophilia should be performed in
patients - who have a history of
- ? thombotic event before the age of 50
- ? recurrent thrombosis
- ? first-degree relative with thrombotic event
before the - age of 50
27Antiplatelet therapy and surgery - Aspirin
- ? No reported increase in bleeding complications
in patients taking aspirin preoperatively
undergoing emergent general surgery procedures
(Ferraris et al. Surgery, Gynecology, and
Obstetircs 1983) - ? Cardiac surgery patients on aspirin therapy
have been noted to have increased transfusion
requirements and higher rates of reoperation for
bleeding but with no difference in mortality
(Sethi et al. JACC 1990, Goldman et al.
Circulation 1998) - ? No consensus recommendations for patients
undergoing general surgery procedures - ? stopping therapy in all patients 7-10 days
prior vs. only those with abnormal bleeding
times vs. continuing through the
perioperative period
28Antiplatelet therapy and surgery - Clopidogrel
- ? Known additive effect when clopidogrel is used
concurrently with aspirin resulting in greater
increase in bleeding time - ? Cardiac surgery patients on clopidogrel therapy
have been noted to have increased transfusion
requirements and higher rates of reoperation for
bleeding (Yende et al. Crit Care Med 2001) - ? No published data on clopidogrel use in
patients undergoing general surgery procedures
29Chronic anticoagulation and surgery
- ? Factors to consider
- ? risk of thromboembolism in the absence of
anticoagulation - ? bleeding risk (patient-risk and
procedure-risk) - ? consequences of intra-op and post-op
bleeding - ? ability to control bleeding
- ? duration of post-op bleeding risk
- ? urgency of surgery
30Chronic anticoagulation and surgery
- ? Indications for chronic anticoagulation
- ? Mechanical prosthetic heart valves
- ? greatest risk for thromboembolic event with
mitral valve, caged-ball valves - ? Atrial fibrillation
- ? greatest risk for thromboembolic event with
history of TIA/stroke, hypertension,
impaired LV function, diabetes - ? Venous thromboembolism
- ? highest risk for recurrent disease within
the first 1 to 3 months following the
initial event
31Chronic anticoagulation and surgery - Reversing
therapy
- ? Warfarin inhibits vitamin K-dependent
?carboxylation of factors II, VII, IX, X and
proteins C and S - ? Procoagulant factors are restored in a pattern
proportional to their half-lives and require
activity levels of 40 for near normal
hemostasis - ? Factor VII has a half-life of 4-6 hours
- ? Factor II has a half-life of 48-96 hours
- ? approximately 4-5 days are required to reach
an INR of 1.4 or less
32Chronic anticoagulation and surgery - Reversing
therapy
- ? Vitamin K1 (phytonadione)
- ? fat-soluble vitamin that requires normal
pancreatic and small bowel function for
absorption of oral form - ? 1.5 mg intravenous dose will reverse
therapeutic levels of oral anticoagulation
within 24-36 hours1,2 - ? larger doses associated with anaphylactoid
reactions - ? 2.5 mg oral dose will have the same effect2
- ? Intramuscular injection should be avoided
due to risk of hematoma - ? Subcutaneous injection should be avoided due
to erratic absorption - 1. Whitling et al. Arch Intern Med 1998
- 2. Shields et al. Mayo Clinic Proc 1995
33Chronic anticoagulation and surgery - Reversing
therapy
- ? Fresh frozen plasma
- ? required volume is 15-16 ml/kg in a patient
who is therapeutic on warfarin - ? prothrombin time will begin to prolong in
several hours following the administration
of FFP due to the short half-life of Factor
VII - ? major limitation is intravascular volume
overload
34Chronic anticoagulation and surgery -
Recommendations
- ? Minor procedures with low risk of bleeding and
easy access to control bleeding need to reduce
the anticoagulation dosing to achieve the lower
limit of therapeutic range (INR 2.0-2.5)
35Chronic anticoagulation and surgery -
Recommendations
- ? Patients on oral anticoagulation for aortic
valve prostheses or low-risk atrial fibrillation - ? stop oral anticoagulants 3-5 days before
surgery - ? resume as soon as possible without loading
dose
36Chronic anticoagulation and surgery -
Recommendations
- ? Patients on oral anticoagulation for mitral
valve prostheses, high-risk atrial fibrillation,
or recent venous thromboembolism (traditional
approach) - ? cessation of oral anticoagulation
- ? concurrent anticoagulation with heparin ?
cessation of heparin 4-6 hours prior to surgery
? resumption of heparin as soon as possible
following surgery -
37Chronic anticoagulation and surgery -
Recommendations
- ? Patients on oral anticoagulation for mitral
valve prostheses, high risk atrial fibrillation,
or recent venous thromboembolism using bridging
therapy with low molecular weight heparin - ? initiate therapy once INR below lower limit
of therapeutic - ? last dose given morning of day prior to
procedure - ? resume LMWH therapy within 48 hours
- ? restart oral anticoagulation day following
surgery - ? options include dalteparin (Fragmin) 100
IU/kg sc bid or enoxaparin (Lovenox) 1 mg/mg
sc bid or 1/5 mg/kg sc qd