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Bleeding Disorders

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Title: Bleeding Disorders


1
Bleeding Disorders
  • Dr. Sabir M. Amin

2
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3
Vascular abnormalities
  • Causes
  • Infections
  • Meningococcemia, Rickettsioses , Infective
    endocarditis
  • Drug reactions
  • Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
  • Cushing syndrome
  • Henoch - Schönlein Purpura
  • Scurvy
  • Amyloidosis

4
(No Transcript)
5
Platelet disorders
  • Thrombocytopenia Reduced platelet number
  • Decreased production of platelets
  • vitamin B12 or folic acid deficiency
  • Decreased platelet survival
  • Immunologic or Nonimmunologic etiology
  • Sequestration- Hypersplenism
  • ameliorated by splenectomy
  • Dilutional
  • Massive transfusions

6
Clinical Features of Bleeding Disorders
  • Platelet Coagulation disorders disorders
  • Site of bleeding Skin Deep in soft tis.
  • Mucous membranes (joints, musc)
  • Petechiae Yes No
  • Ecchymoses (bruises) Small, superficial Large,
    deep
  • Hemarthrosis / muscle bleeding Extremely
    rare Common
  • Bleeding after cuts scratches Yes No
  • Bleeding after surgery or trauma Immediate, Delaye
    d1-2 d
  • usually mild often severe

7
Screening tests
  • Bleeding time
  • 2-9 minutes. Prolonged in thrombocytopenia
  • Platelet counts
  • 150-450 103/mm3
  • Prothrombin time (PT)
  • Measures the extrinsic (V, VII, X) and
    common (prothrombin, fibrinogen) coagulation
    pathways. 10-15 secs
  • activated Partial thromboplastin time (aPTT)
  • Measures the intrinsic (V, VIII, IX, XI,
    VII) and common (prothrombin, fibrinogen)
    coagulation pathways. 30 50 secs
  • Thrombin time
  • Time for thrombin to convert fibrinogen to
    fibrin
  • 9-13 secs

8
Platelet Coagulation
Petechiae, Purpura Hematoma, Joint bl.
9
Hemarthrosis
10
Hematoma
11
Purpura 3-10mm
Petechiae lt3mm
Ecchymosis gt10mm
12
Causes of thrombocytopenia
  • Bone marrow disorders
  • Hypoplasia
  • Idiopathic
  • Drug-induced (cytotoxic, alcohol, thiazides)
  • Infiltration
  • Tumors (leukemia, myeloma, carcinoma)
  • B12/folate deficiency

13
Causescont.
  • Increased consumption of platelets
  • Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
  • Immune thrombocytopenic purpura
  • Viral infections (HIV, Epstein-Barr virus)
  • Bacterial infections (gram-negative septicemia)
  • Hypersplenism
  • Primary
  • Lymphomas
  • Liver disease
  • Malaria

14
Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)
  • It is due to auto- antibodies directed against
    PLT membrane glycoprotein IIb-IIIa which causes
    premature removal of PLTs by the monocyte
    -macrophage system
  • ASSOCIATIONSneoplasm (CLL, lymphoma), infections
    (HIV), autoimmune (SLE)

15
ITP
Feature Acute Chronic
Age / Sex Children Adult/Female
Onset Abrupt Gradual
Predisposing Factors Viral infection/ vaccine -
Duration lt2 months gt6mnoths
Peripheral smear ?PLT Giant PLTS Same
Bone marrow Normal or ?Megakaryocytes Same
16
ITP
Feature Acute Chronic
Tests Prolonged BT Normal PT PTT Same
Complication (most dangerous) Intracranial bleed Same
Clinical course Spontaneous remission No
17
management
  • 1. In children usually it is self-limiting, if
    severe purpura or epistaxis, or PLT lt10000 give
    steroids ( prednisolone 2mg/kg/d)
  • If pesistent epistaxis GI bleeding, retinal
    hemorrhage give PLT transfusion and IV IgG

18
management
  • 2. In adults prednisolone 1 mg/kg/d for 3-4 wk
    then gradually tapered over 6-8 wk. If platelet
    count did not increase after 4 weeks of
    treatment, consider splenectomy
  • PLT transfusion and IVIg 1 g/kg/d 12 days,
    indicated in life-threatening bleeding. If the pt
    has two relapses , splenectomy is indicated,
    which is curative in 70 of patients, in the
    remainder the aim is to keep the patient free of
    symptoms rather than to raise level of PLT( e.g
    5mg/d of prednisolone may be sufficient)

19
management
  • In severe cases iv methylpredinsolone 1gIV
    dailyX3 days. with or without IVIg may be given
  • If still not controlled give immunosuppressive
    drugs e.g vincristine, cyclophosphamide

20
Clotting factor abnormalities
  • Congenital disorders
  • Von Willebrand disease
  • Factor VIII Deficiency - Hemophilia A or Classic
    Type
  • Factor IX Deficiency Hemophilia B
  • Acquired disorders
  • Vit. K deficiency Due to deficient carboxylation
    of factors II, VII, IX X
  • Oral anti-coagulants
  • warfarin inhibit Vit. K factors
  • Liver diseases ? synthesis of factors

21
Hemophilia A
  • Factor VIII is synthesized mainly by liver , but
    also by spleen, kidney, and placenta, carried by
    vWF, half-life in plasma is 12hr.
  • It is X-linked recessive and affects about
    1/10000, thus all daughters of hemophiliacs are
    carriers and 50 of sisters are carriers. If a
    carrier has a son, he has 50 chance of having
    hemophilia and a daughter has 50 chance of being
    a carrier

22
Hemophilia A
  • C/F
  • At around 6 m. child develop bruises and
    hemarthrosis as he starts to move around.
  • Normal level of factor VIII is 50-150, and
    severity is measured according to this level

23
Severity of hemophilia depends on level of
factor VIII
Factor VIII levels lt 1 1 - 5 5 - 25
Type Severe hemophilia Moderate hemophilia Mild hemophilia
Symptoms Severe hemorrhage, deep tissue bleeding. Present within first year of life. Bleeding after mild trauma. Present during childhood. Bleeding after severe trauma and surgery. Present during adulthood.
24
Hemophilia A
  • Joints commonly affected include knees, elbows,
    ankles, and hips.
  • They look hot, swollen, and very painful and
    tender. With recurrent bleeding there will be
    synovial hypertrophy, destruction of cartilage
    and secondary osteoarthritis,
  • In muscles calf, psoas bleeding lead to
    ischemia, necrosis, fibrosis which will lead to
    contracture shortening of tendons e.g. Achilles
    tendon making walking difficult.

25
Shortening of Achilles tendon
26
Dosing guidelines for hemophilia A
  • Mild bleeding
  • Target 30 dosing q8-12h 1-2 days (15U/kg)
  • Hemarthrosis, oropharyngeal or dental, epistaxis,
    hematuria
  • Major bleeding
  • Target 80-100 q8-12h 7-14 days (50U/kg)
  • CNS trauma, hemorrhage, lumbar puncture
  • Surgery
  • Retroperitoneal hemorrhage
  • GI bleeding
  • Adjunctive therapy
  • ?-aminocaproic acid or DDAVP (for mild disease
    only)

27
von Willebrands disease
  • Usually it is a mild bleeding disorder of many
    types, the commonest being type I which is
    autosomal dominant.
  • vWF is synthesized by endothelial cells and
    megakaryocytes and has two functions
  • 1. carrier for F VIII
  • 2. form bridges between PLT and subendothelial
    collagen

28
vW Dis.
  • C/F
  • Bruising, epistaxis, menorrhagia, GI bleeding
  • LAB
  • Decreased level of vWF, increased bleeding
    time, increased PTT

29
Treatment
  • Cryoprecipitate
  • Source of fibrinogen, factor VIII and VWF
  • DDAVP (deamino-8-arginine vasopressin)
  • ? plasma VWF levels by stimulating
    secretion from endothelium

  • Factor VIII concentrate
  • Virally inactivated product

30
Acquired bleeding disorders
  • Liver disease
  • Vitamin K deficiency
  • Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
  • Infection

31
Vitamin K deficiency
  • Source of vitamin K Green vegetables
    intestinal flora
  • Required for synthesis Factors II, VII, IX
    ,X
  • Causes of deficiency
  • Inadequate intake Biliary
    obstruction Malabsorption Antibiotic
    therapy

32
Common clinical conditions associated with DIC
  • Activation of both coagulation and fibrinolysis
  • Triggered by
  • Sepsis (E. coli, N. meningitidis, malaria)
  • Trauma Head injury, Fat embolism
  • Malignancy lung, prostate, pancreatic
  • Obstetrical disorders
  • Amniotic fluid embolism
  • Abruptio placentae
  • Vascular disorders
  • Reaction to toxin (e.g. snake venom, drugs)
  • Immunologic disorders
  • Severe allergic reaction
  • Transplant rejection

33
Pathophysiology
  • damage to endothelium ?release of tissue factor ?
    massive activation of
  • coagulation cascade ? intravascular coagulation
    and depletion of clotting factors

34
Features
  • microangiopathic hemolytic anemia,
    thrombocytopenia, bleeding, thrombosis, ischemia.
    ?INR, ? PTT, ? fibrinogen (although it can be
    normal or even elevated), ? factor VIII (in
    contrast to liver diseases, which have normal
    factor VIII). Schistocytes on peripheral smear

35
Treatment
  • treat underlying cause and complications
    (hypoxia, dehydration, acidosis, acute renal
    failure). Replete coagulation factors if bleeding
    (FFP 2 U, cryoprecipitate 10 U). Anticoagulation
    if thrombosis (consider IV heparin)

36
Management of Hemostatic Defects in Liver Disease
  • Treatment for prolonged PT/PT
  • Vitamin K 10 mg x 3 days - usually ineffective
  • FFP infusion (1200-1500 ml)
  • immediate but temporary effect
  • Treatment for low fibrinogen
  • Cryoprecipitate (1 unit/10kg body weight)
  • Treatment for DIC
  • Replacement therapy

37
Venous thrombosis

38
Venous thrombosis
  • VT arise either because of damage to, or
    pressure on veins (e.g. varicose veins or pelvic
    tumor) , or as a result of changes in plasma or
    cellular elements of blood.
  • The familial thrombophilic disorders include
    factor V Leiden, prothrombin 20210A and
    deficiencies of protein C, protein S, and
    antithrombin.

39
Venous thrombosis
  • The incidence of factor V Leiden, is 3-5, and
    that of the prothrombin 20210A allele is 2-3
  • These are thus the commonest causes of an
    inherited predisposition to venous thrombosis
    (thrombophilia). All the hereditary thrombophilic
    conditions are autosomally dominantly inherited
    and are present in up to 50 of cases of venous
    thrombosis, particularly when recurrent,
    familial, or at a young age.

40
Predisposing factors
  • 1. Patient a) age gt40
  • b) obesity
    c)
    varicose veins
    d) previous DVT
    e)
    OCP
    f) pregnancy/puerperium
    g)
    dehydration
  • h) immobility
  • 2. Surgical
    a) if gt30 min
    duration
    b) abdominal or pelvic
    c) orthopedic to lower limb

41
Pred. fact.
  • 3. Medical a) MI/HF
    b) IBD c) malignancy d)
    Nephrotic syn e) pneumonia
  • 4. Hematological a) PV b) ET c) PNH d)
    myelofibrosis
  • 5. Anticoagulant deficiency a) antithrombin b)
    protein C c) protein S d) factor V Leiden e)
    prothrombin mutations
  • 6. Antiphospholipid syndrome a) lupus
    anticoagulant b) anticardiolipin Ab

42
C/F of familial thrombophilic conditions
  • Family history of venous thromboembolism
  • First episode at early age
  • Recurrent venous thromboembolism
  • Unusual site of thrombosiseg cerebral,
    mesenteric
  • Thrombosis during pregnancy or puerperium
  • Spontaneous venous thrombosis without
    environmental or acquired risk factor
  • Recurrent superficial thrombophlebitis

43
Special Investigations of DVT

Test Advantages Disadvantages
Contrast Gold standard Invasive
Venography Sensitivity 100 Requires specialized equipment
 
MRI Highly accurate Expensive
  Safe during pregnancy Not readily available
  Non-invasive  
   


44
Special investigations
CT Non-invasive Limited data
  Can diagnose pelvic DVT  
  Concurrently exclude PE  
Ultrasonography Highly accurate Not accurate for calf or pelvic DVT
  Non-invasive Complete study is time consuming
D-dimer Rapid laboratory study Only used to rule-out DVT
   
45
Management of thromboembolism
  • Indications for anticoagulation
  • Heparin
  • 1. Treatment prevention of DVT
  • 2. Pulmonary embolism
  • 3. post-thrombolysis for MI
  • 4. unstable angina
  • 5. acute peripheral arterial occlusion

46
Indications of warfarin Rx
  • prophylaxis against DVT
  • treatment of DVT PE
  • arterial embolism
  • AF with stroke risk factors
  • mobile mural thrombus on echo post-MI
  • extensive anterior MI( all these INR 2.5)
  • recurrent DVT
  • mechanical prosth heart valves( latter two
    INR3.5)

47
Contraindications to anticoagulation
  • 1. Recent surgery( esp. to eye or CNS)
  • 2. pre-existing hemorrhagic condition( e.g. liver
    disease, RF, hemophilia, thrombocytopenia)
  • 3. Peptic ulcer
  • 4. Recent cerebral hemorrhage
  • 5. Uncontrolled HT
  • 6. Dementia and frequent falls in old age

48
Heparin
  • Standard (unfractionated) heparin (SH)
    potentiate the activity of antithrombin which
    inhibits the procoagulant enzymic activity of
    factors IIa, VIIa, IXa, Xa, and XIa.
  • Low-molecular weight heparin ( LMWH) augments
    antithrombin activity preferentially against
    factor Xa. LMWH does not prolong PTT( unlike SH),
    and injections need only be given once daily SC
    and no monitoring is required, many pts can be
    treated at home.

49
Heparincont.
  • SH is reserved for treating pts with very severe,
    life-threatening TE e.g. major PE giving rise to
    hypoxia or hypotension.
  • Dose loading dose of 5000 U i.v, followed by a
    continuous infusion of 20U/kg/hr initially. PTT
    done after 6 hr, and if satisfactory daily
    thereafter. The aim is to keep PTT 1.5-2.5 times
    the control time.

50
Heparincont.
  • Half-life of heparin is 1 hr, and if pt bleeds,
    it is sufficient just to discontinue the
    infusion however, if bleeding is severe , the
    excess can be neutralised with i.v protamine.
    Treatment with either SH or LMWH should continue
    for 6-8 days, and it is appropriate to start
    warfarin therapy at the same time as heparin, and
    heparin should be continued until INR is gt2.0 for
    2 consecutive days.

51
Warfarin
  • inhibits vit. K-dependent synthesis of FII, VII,
    IX and X
  • Dose
  • loading 10 mg orally on the first day, and
    subsequent daily doses depending on the INR. If
    single DVT it is given for 3-6 m, if two or more
    it should be continued for life.
  • Bleeding is the most common side effect of
    warfarin 1.0/yr. If INR is above therapeutic
    level stop warfarin and give a small dose of
    vit.k e.g. 5 mg orally or 2 mg by slow i.v. If
    the pt bleeds, give vit. K¹ 1-5 mg slowly i.v. If
    bleeding is serious , give coagulation
    concentrate containing factors II, VII, IX and X
    (50U/kg)or, if unavailable, FFP

52
Prevention of venous thrombosis
  • Full-length graduated compression stockings
  • SH or LMWH
  • It should be started preop and continued until
    the pt is fully mobile
  • Conditions A) moderate risk of DVT 1. major
    surgery in pts gt40yr or with other risk factors,
    2. major medical illness e.g HF, chest
    infection, malignancy, IBD
  • B) High risk of DVT 1. hip or knee surgery, 2.
    major abdominal or pelvic surgery( for malignancy
    or with Hx of DVT or known thrombophilia)
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