Laboratory Assessment and Selected Therapeutic Interventions in Hemostasis Flashcards Preview

Heme/Lymph 1 > Laboratory Assessment and Selected Therapeutic Interventions in Hemostasis > Flashcards

Flashcards in Laboratory Assessment and Selected Therapeutic Interventions in Hemostasis Deck (57)
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1
Q

In vivo vs in vitro

A

In vivo - how it happens in the body…need to understnad for disease
In vitro - how it happens outside the body…important for understanding lab results

2
Q

Platelet count

A

150-400 thousand/uL
Spontaneous bleeding risk low unless count is <10,000
Thrombotic risk at 1 million

3
Q

Bleeding time

A

Standardized skin incision
Blot blood flow with filter paper until it comes away clean and measure time til it stops
Preop risk assessment for bleeding…not good

4
Q

PFA-100

A

Superior to bleeding time
Citrated whole blood aspirated through hole in membrane lined with collagen plus epineprhine or ADP
Activated platelets aggregate
Measure time for platelet plug to occlude hole - closure time

Citrate tube sequesters calcium and only measures primar y

5
Q

Prolonged CT

A

Thrombocytopenia, vWD, aspirin ingestion, Glanzman, thrombasthenia
not useful for antiplatelet drug monitoring
Good neg predictive value…normal CT means not primary hemostatic dz

6
Q

PLatelet aggregation testing

A

Platelets concentrated into platelet rich plasma …various platelet activation facotrs added individually
Activation leads to GP2b/3a mediated aggregation…aggregated clumps fall out of suspension…measurable light transmission increases

Uses light transmission aggregometry

7
Q

Impedence aggregometry

A

Whole blood…platelet aggregation increases electrical resistance

8
Q

Glanzmann thrombasthenia on LTA

A

Will show flat line because GP2b/3a receptors don’t work and no aggregation

9
Q

Bernard Soulier dz on LTA

A

Looks normal
Ristocetin must be used to diagnose B-S…binds to vWF and induces conformation change that exposes normally hidden GP1b binding domain, enabling it to agglutinate with platelets

10
Q

Stoarge pool dz on LTA

A

Heterogenous

Aspirin will flatten the curve like Glanzman

11
Q

Congenital aspirin like defect

A

Platelets do not respond to arachidonic acid

12
Q

Aggregation vs agglutination

A

Aggregation - depends on GP2b/3a

Agglutination - depends on GP1b

13
Q

Aspirin affect on platelets

A

Aspirin irreversibly inhibits platelet COX enzymnes and blocks TXA2 production…inihibits TXA2 mediated platelet activation

Transfers its acetyl group to the COX 1 enzyme

14
Q

GP2B/3a antagonists

Phosphodiesterase inhibitors

A

GP2B/3a antagonists - block platelet aggregation

Phosphodiesterase inhibitors promote persistance of cyclic AMP and GMP, enhancing platelet inhibitory NO effects

15
Q

THienopyridines

A

Block platelet activation (clopidogrel and prasugrel)

Permanently bind P2Y12 ADP receptors

16
Q

VerifyNow

A

Rapid test for aspirin or plavix effect on patients
Employs fibrinogen coated beads whcih aggregate in proportion to GP2B/3A receptors (fewer exposed if more blocked by drug)
Agonist (ADP for plavix and AA for aspirin) activates platelets, exposing GP2B/3S which binds the beads

17
Q

Ristocetin cofactor activity

A

Test for vWF (%)
Patients native platelets removed and replaced with formlain treated reagent platelets

Formalin treated will agglutinate at rate proportional to concentration

18
Q

ELISA assay for vWF

A

Uses anti-vWF ABs to quantitate amount

19
Q

Types of vWD and quantitation

A

1 and 3 - decreased vWF production…protein quantity and activity low
Type 2 - abnormal that may or may not be decreased…activity low but amount may be normal

20
Q

RIPA

A

Ristocetin induced platelet aggregation - test for type 2B vWD
Should agglutinate at lower concentrations if type 2B because conformation already present
Test for type 2B

If diagnosed, can treat with DDAVP

21
Q

Multimer analysis

A

Good for vWD
Type 1 and 3 - decrease in all sizes
Type 2 - selective loss of HMW multimers
TTP - increased multimer

22
Q

Clot based test advantages and disadvantages

A

Well established, available, simple, cheap, familiar

Potentially misleading

23
Q

Clot based tests

A

Being with platelet poor plasma…excess calcium neutralizes citrate…reagnet phospholipid fills role of removed platelets…clot formation stimulated with an agonist…end point is initial detection of clot

Only for secondary hemostatic dz

24
Q

Endpoint of clot based tests

A

Fibrinogen to fibrin cleavage (detecting fibrin formation)

25
Q

Where do in vitro and in vivo converge?

A

Factor 10

26
Q

Common pathway sequecne

A

10, 2 ,1

27
Q

Extrinsic pathway

A

Tissue factor, F7, F10, 2, 1

28
Q

Intrinsic pathway

A

F12 forms with HMWK and PK…F12 cleaves F11…F11 cleaves F9 (needs F8)…cleaes F10…2, 1

29
Q

PTT

PT

A
Isolated PTT (partial thromboplastin time) prolongation points to extrinsic 
Isolated PT (prothrombin time) pointed to F7
30
Q

PTT

A

Partial thromboplastin time
All elements intrinsic to ciruclation (No TF)
TO start, silica added with Ca and phosphlipids removed

Phospholipids without TF - partial thromboplastin

Commonly used for monitoring unfractionated heparin

31
Q

PT

A

Prothrombin time
Evaluates extrinsic pathway
TF needed to start the reaction…added with Ca and phospholipids previously removed
Phospholipids plus TF - thromboplastin

Common used for warfarin dosing

32
Q

INR

A

International normalized ratio
Intended to standardize PT results across labs
Used for warfarin

33
Q

Warfarin

A

Requires frequent labs

Dose affected by Vit K intake, drug effects of CYP2C9 metab, genetic polymorphisms of CYP2C9 and VKO reductase activity

34
Q

If needed to start warfarin early for thromboembolism, must

A

Bridge with heparin due to short half life of F7…if started on full warfarin, would run out of protein C and become hypercoagulable…risk is warfarin induced skin necrosis

35
Q

ISI

A

International sensitivity index - closer to 1 is better

36
Q

INR formula

A

(PT patient/PT normal)^ISI

Range should be 2-3

37
Q

PT and PTT mixing studies

A

How to tell if due to deficiency or inhibitor
If PT/PTT corrects into the normal range, then due to factor def
If not, due to inhibitor like LAC or factor specific AB

38
Q

SPecific factor assays

A

Plasma deficienct in the specific factor of interest is added to patient speciemn…in absence of inhibitor, degree of prolongation inversely correlates with factor activity

39
Q

Urea clot lysis

A

Used to test for F13 def

urea will lyse a clot of uncrosslinked…will not lyse clot of cross linked

40
Q

Factor def

A

Single factor - mild hemophilia, if F12, then doesn’t matter
Multiple factors - liver dz or vit K def

41
Q

Inhibitors

A

Heparin
LAC
Specific factor inhibitoras

42
Q

In mixing study, if mix corrects

A

Need to obtain factor activity levels

If it doesn’t correct, rule out heparin exposure or contam, and consider LAC testing

43
Q

Most factor specific antibodies at

A

Anti-F8 - bethesda unit score…put in human plasma until 50% F8 emerges…inverse is BUS

44
Q

LAC testing

A

IN vitro clotting time prolonged
Mixing study does NOT correct
Add excess of phospholipid and if it corrects, then lupus anticoagulant and repeat in 8-12 weeks

45
Q

DRRVT

A

Dilute Russell viper venom time

Tests for LA subtypes…anti-beta-2 glycoprotein…more specific for clinically signifant LA

46
Q

What does DRVV do?

A

Acvtiates F10 to initiate clotting and bypasses both intrinsic and extrinsic pathways…If LAC present, prolongs clot time

47
Q

ACA testing

A

ELISA based assay

Cardiolipin Ag bound to sides of test tube…binds, detected using anti-human-Ig ABs

48
Q

Heparin

A

Liver, gut, basophils, mast cells
Heparin has super negative charge
Chemically similar to heparans found on endothelial cells walls
All heparins have a common pentasaccharide sequence that fits into AT

49
Q

Heparin types

A

UFH - unfractionated heparin - range of molecular sizes with up to 30 additional sugars
LMWH - low molecular weight heparin - only smaller
Fondaparinux - only the pentasaccharide

50
Q

Effect of heparin molecular size

A

Inhibition of thrombin requires a larger heparin molecule to span both other molecules
This is not necessary for F10 inhibition
Thus LMWH inhibits F10 but not thrombin

51
Q

UFH affect

A

Prolongs PT and PTT

52
Q

LMWH affect

A

Not reliably prolonging of PT and PTT

If needed to monitor - use anti-Xa assay

53
Q

Anti-Xa assay

A

Add F10a to patient plasma…measure activity of F10…inversely proportional to heparin concentration

54
Q

ACT

A

Advanced clotting time

Also a way to monitor heparin

55
Q

Protamine

A

Binds and inactivates heparin

56
Q

D-dimer values

A

Elevation demonstrates prior formation of cross linked fibrin
Expected to be elevated in VTE, surgery, trauma
Negative predictive value in reuling out VTE in case of PE

57
Q

Rotational viscoelastography

A

Thromboelastography
Measures whole blood clot strength over time
Can help distinguish between anatomic and coagulopathic bleeding,
Can detect hypercoagulability to avert thrombosis
Indentifies fibrinolysis
Optimizes use of blood products and antifibrinolytic drugs