Title: Review of Haemostasis for Medical Students
1Review of Haemostasis for Medical Students
2Topics
- Physiology of haemostasis
- Bleeding disorders (congenital)
- Massive blood loss
- DIC
- Anticoagulant drugs
- rVIIa
3Haemostasis needs
- Platelets
- Vessel Wall
- Clotting Factors
4FIG 1 Normal blood vessel
erythrocyte platelet lumen leukocyte
Intima/media with endothelial cell basal
membrane smooth muscle cells collagen fibers
5- FIG 2
- Injured blood vessel
- Exposure of collagen
- Adhesion of platelets mediated by vWF
- Activation and de-granulation of platelets
- Aggregation of platelets
erythrocyte non-activatedplatelet lumen endotheli
al cell basal membrane activated
collagen-boundplatelet collagen fibers smooth
muscle cells
6FIG 3 Platelet plug stabilization by fibrin
lumen endothelial cell basal membrane erythrocytes
activatedplatelets plug sealing and
stabilization by fibrin formation
7Normal Platelet / vWF Function
- Release of
- ADP
- serotonin
- calcium
- etc
- Release of
- glycoproteins
- vWF
- fibrinogen
- coagulation factors
platelet
d-granule
a -granule
GPIb-IX receptor-complex
von Willebrand - Factor
fibrinogen
GPIIb-IIIa receptor-complex
8Von Willebrand factor
- VWF is a large complex molecule. It has three
main functions - 1)It sticks to platelets (via GpIb)
- 2)It sticks to collagen 1) 2) means it lets
platelets stick to collagen - 3)It binds VIII and protects it from degrading
and therefore increases its half-life - VWF is made by endothelial cells and
megakaryocytes (not the liver like the other
factors). - When released into the circulation it is in the
form of Ultra-large molecular weight multimers
(like a large bundle of straw). - Ultra-large multimers of VWF are processed in the
circulation into smaller High-molecular weight
multimers, these are important for platelet
interactions. Smaller multimers are also found in
the circulation as a result of continued
processing.
9Von Willebrand factor
- A lack of High-molecular weight multimers of VWF
can reduce the platelet-collagen interaction and
lead to a bleeding diathesis. - Some patients with VWD have low (type I) or very
low (type III) levels of a normal VWF molecule.
Other patients have normal levels of a VWF
molecule which lacks one (or many) of the three
functions above or cannot form multimers properly
(type II).
10Traditional view
Intrinsic System
Extrinsic System
Collagen / Kallikrein
Prekallikrein
HMWK
XII
XIIa
VII
XI
XIa
Tissue Factor
X
Phospholipid VIII
VIIa Tissue Factor
IX
IXa
2
2
Ca
Ca
Fibrinogen
Xa
2
V Phospholipid Ca
Final
Prothrombin
Thrombin
Common
Pathway
Fibrin
XIII
XIIIa
Ca
2
Cross Linked Fibrin
11New view
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14PT
The starter motor..
Switched off by Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor
Provides initial Thrombin burst
Factors measured in Prothrombin Time
15The engine.. Thrombin from initial burst back
activates intrinsic system
APTT
TT
Fibrin then cross linked by XIII
16Natural anticoagulants
- Protein C (activated by thrombin/thrombomodulin)
- Protein S - cofactor for protein C
- Protein C and S cleave factors V and VIII
- Antithrombin inhibits Thrombin and Xa
- TAT complexes removed by liver
- Activity increased 000s by heparin
17Global coagulation tests
- APTT Kallikrein, HMWK, XII, XI, IX, VIII, X, V,
II, I - intrinsic system
- PT VII, X, V, II, I
- extrinsic system
- TT I
- NB reason for 5050 mix (inhibitors versus
deficiency) - Protamine correction
- Reptilase time
- Specific factor assays
- Bleeding time, PFA-100, TEG
18CAUSES OF A PROLONGED PROTHROMBIN TIME
- CONGENITAL
- Coagulation factor deficiencies VII, X, V, II, I
- ACQUIRED
- Hepatocellular disease
- Vitamin K deficiency (II, VII, IX, X)
obstructive jaundice, haemorrhagic disease of the
newborn - Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
- Massive blood transfusion
- Warfarin (monitoring test based on PT)
- Gross overheparinisation, some lupus
anticoagulants
19CAUSES OF A PROLONGED ACTIVATED PARTIAL
THROMBOPLASTIN TIME
- CONGENITAL
- Coagulation factor deficiencies XII, XI, IX,
VIII, X, V, II, I - ACQUIRED
- Hepatocellular disease
- Vitamin K deficiency
- Disseminated intravascular coagulation
- Massive blood transfusion
- Heparin (monitoring test based on APTT)
- Lupus anticoagulants
20CAUSES OF A PROLONGED THROMBIN TIME
- CONGENITAL
- Dys/hypofibrinogenaemia
- ACQUIRED
- Hepatocellular disease dys/hypofibrinogenaemia
- Disseminated intravascular coagulation
- hypofibrinogenaemia
- FDPs
- Heparin
21Fibrinolysis
Circulating antiplasmin and PAI I inhibit this
system. Their effect is not present in the milieu
of the clot which protects tPA and Plasmin
form their actions
Plasmin interaction with Fibrin is Lys residue
dependent. TAFI removes such residues. TA and
EACA act as Lys analogues.
tPA or uPA
Plasminogen
Plasmin
Fibrin degradation products
Fibrin
(If x-linked get D-D dimers)
22Platelets
- The job of platelets is to
- Form a plug in a breech in a blood vessel wall to
arrest haemorrhage - Provide a phospholipid surface rich in negatively
charged phospholipid for coagulation factors to
interact (tenase and prothrombinase complexes).
23Platelets
- Platelets have receptors for components of the
subendothelium, which is exposed when a blood
vessel is cut. A very important initial
interaction is that between platelet glycoprotein
IbIX-V, VWF and collagen. - The above triggers activation of the platelets,
in particular IIb-IIIa receptors in an active
conformation are moved to the surface. This
receptor facilitates platelet cross-linking via
fibrinogen. - Activated platelets release contents from their
granules including ADP, which in turn activate
more platelets. - Activation of the platelet Arachadonic acid
pathway results in the release of thromboxane A2. - Activated platelets flip-flop their membrane
phospholipids to provide a negatively charged
surface.
24Haemophilia
- A reduced VIII B reduced IX
- Both sex-linked recessive
- Queen Victoria
- Intronic rearrangements, point mutations, gene
deletions - Haemophilia A 1 in 10,000 male infants
- Prolonged APTT (normal PT and TT)
- Mild Rx Tranexamic acid, DDAVP (not HB)
- Severe Rx factor replacement recombinant or
pooled donor - Home prophylaxis
- Past problem with HIV, now HCV ??? CJD
25Von Willebrands Disease
- Functions of VWF
- 1. Sticks to platelets (GPIb)
- 2. Sticks to collagen in subendothelium
- (Important in small blood vessel lesions high
shear stress) - 3. Binds to and protects VIII (labile)
- Therefore in VWD see long APTT (low VIII) and
bleeding where VWF platelet interaction important
26Von Willebrands Disease
- Type 1 mild- moderate quantitative deficiency
- Type 2 qualitative changes (functional)
- Type 3 severe deficiency
- Type 2N reduced VIII binding in isolation
- Type 2A absent HMW multimers
- Type 2B increased affinity for platelet GPIb
- Type 2M HMW multimers present
27Von Willebrands Disease
- Treatment options
- DDAVP, antifibrinolytics
- NB DDAVP causes fluid retention. NOT for type 2B
- Intermediate purity VIII concentrate
- VWF concentrate (NB takes hours for VIII to
follow so may need to give both) - (NB type I may auto-correct in pregnancy)
28Massive blood loss
- Defined as loss of gt one circulating volume in 24
hours - Coagulopathy is multifactorial
- Loss of factors only once 80 of volume replaced
- Dilution of factors during fluid resuscitation
- Inhibitory effect of some colloids on clotting
factors - DIC secondary to trauma
- Acidosis
- Hypothermia (enzymes) (blood warmer)
29Massive blood loss
- Regular checks of FBC and PT,APTT,TT and
Fibrinogen - Aim for platelets gt 50x109/l or gt100x109/l if
polytrauma or CNS injury - Aim for fibrinogen gt1g/l
- Aim for PT and APTT lt1.5x control times
- FFP 12-15ml/kg
- Cryoprecipitate 1-1.5 packs /10kg if fibrinogen
fails to correct with FFP - ? rVIIa
- Stainsby D, MacLennan S, Hamilton PJ. Management
of massive blood loss a template guideline.Br J
Anaesth. 2000 Sep85(3)487-91.
30Disseminated intravascular Coagulation
- ..an acquired syndrome characterised by the
intravascular activation of coagulation with loss
of localisation arising from different causes. - DIC can originate from and cause severe damage to
the microvasculature, which if sufficiently
severe, can produce organ dysfunction. - ISTH definition
31Causes of DIC
- Conditions associated with overt DIC
- sepsis/severe infection (any organism)
- trauma (e.g. polytrauma, neurotrauma, fat
embolism) - organ destruction (e.g. severe pancreatitis)
- malignancy
- massive blood loss with inadequate fluid
replacement therapy - vascular abnormalities
- (e.g. Kassbach-Merrit syndrome)
- severe hepatic failure
- severe toxic or immunological reactions
- (e.g. recreational drugs, transfusion reactions,
transplant rejection) -
32Pathogenesis of DIC
- Basically.
- Excess thrombin generation
- Reduced natural anticoagulant activity
- Decreased fibinolysis
33Excess thrombin generation
- Increased tissue factor (monocytes and
endothelial cells due to pro-inflammatory
cytokines. - Tissue thromboplasin (the stuff in the PT reagent
from damaged tissue or malignant tissue) - Direct activation of clotting factors by snake
venoms
34Reduced natural anticoagulant activity
- Low antithrombin (increased TAT clearance and
decreased liver biosynthesis) - Lower protein C activity (reduced thrombomodulin,
low protein S (bound to c4b binding protein),
reduced synthesis)
35Decreased fibinolysis
- Increased PAI I
- Levels correlate with outcome in meningococcal
sepsis
36Clinical features
- Mucosal oozing, bleeding from surgical wounds or
indwelling canulae - Multi organ failure secondary to microthrobi (and
hypovolaemia)
37Diagnosis
Diagnostic algorithm for the diagnosis of overt
DIC Does the patient have an underlying disorder
known to be associated with overt DIC? (If yes,
proceed if no, do not use this algorithm)
Order global coagulation tests (platelet
count, PT, fibrinogen, soluble fibrin monomers
(SFM) or fibrin degradation products
(FDP). Score coagulation test results Platelet
count (gt1000 lt1001, lt502) Elevated FDP or SFM
(no increase0 moderate increase2 strong
increase3) Prolonged PT (by lt3 seconds0 gt3 but
lt6 seconds1 gt6 seconds2) Fibrinogen level
(gt1g/l0 lt1g/l1) Score gt5 compatible with
overt DIC Score lt5 suggestive (not affirmative)
of non-overt DIC repeat tests in 1-2 days
38Management of DIC
- TREAT THE CAUSE
- Fluid resus as needed, antibiotics if sepsis
- If bleeding or need surgery give FFP, Platelets,
Cryoprecipitate - (Aim Plateletsgt50x109/l, PT and APTT lt 1.5x
normal) - If thrombotic manifestations eg. Dermal
ischaemia consider low dose heparin infusion.
39Heparin
40Heparin
- Unfractionated
- monitor with APTT (ratio 1.5-2.5 - base on
patients baseline) - reversal by stopping infusion and very rapid with
protamine sulphate - can be hard to anticoagulate some children due to
low antithrombin levels - bolus then continuous infusion
- Low molecular weight
- less monitoring
- once or twice daily administration
- more reliable pharmacokinetics (NB renal
excretion) - anti-Xa levels - 4h post dose
- Treatment 0.5-1 Prophylaxis 0.1-0.3 IU/ml
41Warfarin
II, VII, IX, X, protein C and S are vitamin K
dependent. NB C and S fall first so overlap
with heparin (Warfarin induced skin
necrosis) Peri-surgical management of patients
on warfarin
42Other anticoagulant agents
- Aspirin
- Clopidogrel
- Abciximab
- NSAIDS
- Fibrinolytics
43rVIIa
44rVIIa
- VIII inhibitors
- massive blood loss
- inherited platelet disorders
- Jehovahs witnesses
- 90 microg/Kg every 2 hours
- normalise other things (platelets, Hb,
fibrinogen, factors) as possible - consider mega-dose
- NB consent for non-licensed indications
- EXPENSIVE
45rVIIa
- 1 vial of rVIIa (1.2 mg) 702
- 1 vial of rVIIa (2.4 mg) 1404
- 1 unit of blood from 100
- 1 pool of platelets from 190
- So 35 Kg boy needs 3150 microg so 3 vials opened
each dose - 3 x 702 2,106
- 2 hourly for one day 2106 x 12 25,272
46Questions