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Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I Richard E. Freeman MD 2013

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Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I. Richard E. Freeman MD 2013. Overview. The Players Factor Deficiencies causing bleeding Dissolving the Clot The Clinical Presentation Other Causes of Bleeding Hypercoagulability. Bleeding Bleeding Diathesis. Clotting Hemostasis Coagulation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Bleeding & Clotting

Disorders IRichard E. Freeman

MD2013

Page 2: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
Page 3: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Overview

• The Players

• Factor Deficiencies causing bleeding

• Dissolving the Clot

• The Clinical Presentation

• Other Causes of Bleeding

• Hypercoagulability

Page 4: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

The Precarious Balance

• Bleeding• Bleeding Diathesis

• Clotting• Hemostasis• Coagulation• Thrombophilia

the anticoagulants vs. the procoagulants

Page 5: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

• Hemostasis:– cessation of blood loss from a damaged

vessel

• Other Terms– bleeding disorders = bleeding diathesis =

coagulopathies– diathesis [Gr. Diathenai – to predispose] : A

constitutional predisposition to certain diseases or conditions

Page 6: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Clots Stop Blood Flow

Page 7: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Phases of Clot FormationI. VASCULAR INJURY & SPASM

constriction of injured blood vessel– injury releases tissue factors, platelets

release serotonin (vasoconstrictor), and activates extrinsic pathway

II. PLATELET PLUG FORMATIONcollagen in vessel exposed by injury.

von Willebrand factor (vWF) needed to bridge platelets and collagen.

– Calcium (Ca 2+) needed

Page 8: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Phases of Clot Formation

III. COAGULATION CASCADE

INTRINSIC AND EXTRINSIC PATHWAYS

formation of cross-linked fibrin polymer clot “fibrin clot”

IV. DISSOLUTION OF CLOT

Page 9: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

vascular spasm

Page 10: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

platelet plug formation

collagen fibers

platelet plug

Page 11: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

clot formation

fibrin

Page 12: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

The Players

Page 13: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Complex Interactions

• ALL OF THESE MUST FUNCTION NORMALLY for EFFECTIVE CLOT FORMATION and HEMOSTASIS– Vascular endothelial cells– Platelets– Clotting factor cascade– Blood flow & shear– Antifibrinolysis

Page 14: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Blood Content & Hemostasis• Plasma – Unclotted liquid part of blood

– 90% Water

– 10% Dissolved and suspending particles• Organics: Proteins

– albumin 53%-LIVER– globulins 43%

» Antibodies-RE SYSTEM» Compliment & Kinin System (Inflamation)» Clotting Factors-LIVER AND ELSEWHERE

– Fibrinogen 4%

• Inorganics: salts

• Blood Cells– RBCs – Erythrocytes– WBCs – Leukocytes– Platelets – Thrombocytes

Page 15: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

•ENDOTHELIAL CELLS

Page 16: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Three Layers of the Blood Vessel• Tunica intima:

endothelial cells (EC) & subendothelium

• Tunica media:

• smooth muscles & extracellular matrix

• Tunica adventitia: fibroblasts & cellular matrix(loose connective tissue)

Page 17: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

The Endothelial Cell (EC)

• 1. Intact, healthy EC produces and is “teflon” coated with prostacyclin (PGI2)

• – RESTING STATE– A vasodilator– Inhibits platelet adhesion– Acts in opposition to the platelet thromboxane A2

• 2. EC coated w/ heparin sulfate which activates anti-thrombin III in plasma & stops thrombosis

• 3. Synthesis of Factor VIII – vonWillebrand factor– vWF synthesized in platelets & EC

Page 18: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

3

•PLATELETS

Page 19: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
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The Amazing Platelet• 1. Secrete procoagulants which promote

clotting• 2. Secrete vasoconstrictors causing vascular

spasm in injured blood vessels• 3. as they aggregate they undergo

degranulation releasing:– serotonin (vasoconstrictor),– ADP (attractant)-calls for more platelets to help, – thromboxane A2 –(clot promoter)

• 4. form temporary platelet plugs to stop bleeding

• 5. dissolves blood clots that have outlasted their usefulness

• 6. inflammation and remodeling

Page 21: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Platelets

Page 22: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Life of a Platelet

• MEGAKARYOCYTE (“mama” cell) fragmentation in marrow

• thrombopoietin (TPO) stimulates production produced in liver, bone marrow & kidney

• 1/3 sequestered to the spleen

• 2/3 into circulation (150-450,000 per microliter of blood).

• LIFE SPAN 7 TO 10 DAYS– (RBCs 90-120 days, WBCs 1 day)

– ASA (aspirin) thus effect lasts this long • irreversible acetylation of cyclooxygenase 1

Page 23: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Cell Lines

Page 24: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Platelet-Chemistry• ACTIN-MYOSIN

– Contraction – pulls clot together

• SURFACE: GP IIb/IIIa glycoprotein– Important in adhesion and aggregation

• DENSE GRANULE: – Calcium, ADP, Serotonin

• ALPHA-GRANULE: – Growth factor, fibrinogen, Factor V, von

Willebrand factor (vWF), fibronectin, beta-thromboglobulin, heparin antagonist (PF4), thrombospondin

Page 25: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

PLATELET

Page 26: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

PLATELETS-FOUR MAJOR FUNCTIONS

• 1. ADHESION ACTIVATION

• 2. AGGREGATION

• 3. SECRETION

• 4. PROCOAGULANT ACTIVATION

Page 27: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

1. ADHESION ACTIVATION:

– platelet on subendothelial matrix (surface)

– glycoprotein IIb/IIIa surface receptor binds vWF in subendo matrix

Page 28: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

2. AGGREGATION:

– cohesion of platelets

– fibrinogen binds activated glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor

• Inhibited by – abciximab IV (ReoproR), tirofiban (AggrastatR),

eptifibatide (IntegrelinR) all IV; used in angioplasty; often used along with aspirin and heparin*

– ADP-receptor involved in GP IIb/IIIa-fibrinogen interaction and possibly also the vWF site • Inhibited by

– clopidogrel (PlavixR), ticlopidine (TicilidR) inhibit; both given PO*

*all treat and prevent arterial thrombosis

Page 29: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
Page 30: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

3. SECRETION:

• release of plt. granule proteins– ADP, serotonin, adhesive protein (fibronectin,

others), Factor V, thromboxane A2

– many growth factors (smooth muscle etc)• may be involved in restenosis post PTCA

Page 31: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

4. PROCOAGULANT ACTIVITY:

• enhancement of thrombin generation– assembly of the clotting cascade on the

platelet surface

Page 32: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

1 2

3

4

Page 33: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

GP-IIb/IIIa Receptor

Page 34: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
Page 35: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

•CLOTTING FACTOR CASCADE

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Coagulation: the common pathway• THE OBJECTIVE• is to convert the

plasma protein fibrinogen into fibrin, a sticky protein that adheres to the walls of a vessel and also traps additional platelets and RBCs like a spider’s web

Factor X

Page 38: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Fibrin Polymerization-

Page 39: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Coagulation Cascade

• TWO reaction pathways (roads)

– INTRINSIC PATHWAY uses only clotting factors found inside the blood itself (plasma, platelets) 3- 6 seconds

– EXTRINSIC PATHWAY initiated by clotting factors released in damaged vessels (tissue factor or thromboplastin) and perivascular tissues -15 seconds

• Roman numerals indicate the order discovered, however some numbers are not used: – Factor IV is Ca++; Factor VI is activated Factor V

Page 40: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Coagulation Cascade PathwaysIntrinsic Pathway

Extrinsic Pathway

Common Pathway

CLOTEXtrinsic = In Tissue

INtrinsic = In BloodCommon = Yields fibrin

Page 41: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

THE INTRINSIC PATHWAY-the reaction amplification cascade

Page 42: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
Page 43: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Table 18.9

Page 44: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

PROCOAGULANT “CLOTTING FACTORS”

Synthesis

• ALL synthesized in the LIVER except– von Willebrand Factor in megakaryocytes and

endothelial cells• vWF is involved in

– PLATELET ACTIVATION– Maintaining normal factor VIII levels

Page 45: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Vitamin K

• Vitamin K-dependent procoagulants– II (Prothrombin), VII, IX, X

• Vitamin K-dependent anticoagulants– Warfarin-dicoumarol (COUMADIN)

– Vit K antagonist– Inhibits Vit K epoxide reductase

• (recycles oxidized Vit K – after K has been used in carboxylation of clotting factor production)

Page 46: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

“THE REGULATORS”

• PROTEIN C & S

• ANTITHROMBIN

• TISSUE FACTOR PATHWAY INHIBITOR

• PLASMINOGEN->PLASMA

• PROSTACYCLIN ( PGI2)

Page 47: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

PROTEIN C & PROTEIN S

Protein C & Protein S• ACTION: inactivates Factor Va and VIIIa• “Natural anticoagulant” – keeps system in balance• Protein C:

– vitamin K-dependent serine protease enzyme

• Thrombomodulin (on endothelial cell surfaces) and Thrombin stimulate Protein C and when activated by Protein S- inactivates Factor V

• .see flow diagram

Page 48: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
Page 49: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

thrombin + thrombomodulin on endothelium turns off clotting cascade by activating Protein C.Protein C w/ Protein S (a cofactor) turn off various Factors

Page 50: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Protein C & S deficiency

• Spontaneous Thrombosis/thromboemboli

• Suspect in young person with DVT/Stroke with significant risk factors

• Most will be need Lifelong Anticoagulant therapy

Page 51: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

FACTOR V - LEIDEN

• MUTATIONS OF FACTOR VA –

–resistant to APC (activated protein C)–Factor V Leiden mutation (present in 20

– 60% of pts with spontaneous venous thromboembolism

–5% of European decent, rare in Asian and African decent

Page 52: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

ANTITHROMBIN III

• Serine protease inhibitor

• Active at all times

• Degrades:– Thrombin, Factors IXa, Xa, XIa, XIIa,

• Enhanced by Heparin sulfate

• Deficiency- leads to thrombophilia

Page 53: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

activatedAT-III

activeAT-III binds Thrombin

inactiveAT-III

Page 54: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

TISSUE FACTOR PATHWAY INHIBITOR (TFPI)

• limits the action of tissue factor (TF)

• inhibits excessive TF-mediated activation of FVII and FX

Page 55: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

PLASMIN-fibrinolysis

Page 56: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Fibrinolysis: Dissolution of Clot

• Plasminogen Plasminogen a– t-Plasminogen activator (t-PA)

• cleaves plasminogen into the activated form: a two chain disulfide

• Plasminogen ----kallikrein----Plasmin• PLASMIN DISSOLVES THE CLOT

– limits fibrin clot to avoid ischemia in tissue – localizes clot to prevent widespread thrombosis

Page 57: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I
Page 58: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

DISSOLVING THE BLOOD CLOT

D-dimer

Page 59: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

PROSTACYCLIN (PGI2)

• Produced by endothelial cell via PGH1

• chiefly prevents formation of the PLATELET plug

• inhibiting platelet activation

• Antagonist to Thromboxane (TXA2)

• Vasodilator– epoprostenol –FLOLAN

• primary pulmonary hypertension

Page 60: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Control Mechanisms-BLOOD FLOW AND SHEAR

• DILUTION of procoagulants by flowing blood

• Removal of activated Factors via RE cells

• Stasis promotes clotting

Page 61: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Antithrombotic Mechanisms-summary• INTRINSIC REGULATION OF CLOTTING CASCADE

– ANTITHROMBIN III – PROTEIN C/PROTEIN S– TF PATHWAY INHIBITOR

• TISSUE FACTOR (thromboplastin or factor III)• MODULATION OF VESSEL AND PLATELET REACTIVITY

– PROSTACYCLIN (PGI2) – repulses platelets – nitric oxide- Vasodilation

• INHIBITION OF PLATELET RECRUITMENT

– Ecto-ADPase (CD39) – inactivated ADP • REMOVAL OF FIBRIN CLOT (CLOT BUSTERS )

– Fibrinolysis– tPA and plasminogen

Page 62: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Prevention of Inappropriate Coagulation• Platelet repulsion (PGI2; nitric oxide-- vasodilation)• Dilution of activated factor

– Nitric oxide-vasodilator more blood flow– STASIS IS THE ENEMY

• in low flow states may see thrombosis

• Circulating anticoagulants– antithrombin-III (circulating protease inhibitor)

• inhibits thrombin & Factor X – two big players in common pathway !!!!

– heparin-blocks thrombin quickly, • prothrombin activator, and promotes antithrombin III activity

(supercharges it)• Source: Mast cells

– Protein C & Protein S – negative feedback of pathways; important due to

common deficiencies found in pts• Fibrinolysis removes clot

Page 63: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Diminished thrombin formationfrom many etiologies causesHEMORRHAGE

1.Excessive production of thrombin, 2.AT-III deficiency3. Protein C or SDeficiencyTHROMBOSIS

Protein C & Sinhibit this

(-)

Plasminogen

Tissue factor

Page 64: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Thrombotic Disorders

• Genetic– Factor V Leiden

mutation– Protein C deficiency– Protein S deficiency– Antithrombin III

deficiency– prothrombin 20210

mutation

• Acquired– Antiphospholipid

antibodies• (Anti-Cardiolipin

antibodies)

– Cancer– Atherosclerosis– Hyper-homocysteinemia– Infection– Stasis– Injury

Page 65: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Hypercoagulability

-more deaths from clotting than

bleeding

Page 66: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

“KILLER CLOTS”

• Myocardial infarction

• Deep venous ThrombosisPulmonary Emboli

• Cerebral vascular accidents-

• Thrombotic Emboli-sources– Carotids– Heart – Atrial fibrillation, CHF

Page 67: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Deep Venous Thrombosis/Venous Thrombo Embolism

• VenousThromboEmbolism: DVT and/orPE– 1:1000 Americans, yearly– high death rate

• 250,000 Americans/year

– objective of DVT treatment to prevent PE– 59 % of VTE from current or recent

hospitalization or nursing home• 24 % hospital-surgery• 22 % hospital-medical• 13 % nursing home

Page 68: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

VTE risk

• Malignancy• Trauma• Surgery- Extremity• Smoking• Drugs- Birth Control – high estrogen• Congestive Heart failure• Central Venous Pressure (CVP) catheter• Pacemaker/Defibrillator placement• Neurological deficits- CVA, MS, Spinal cord• Superficial vein thrombosis• Hereditary deficiencies- ProteinC/S, antithrombin III

• STASIS, STASIS, STASIS

Page 69: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Hypercoagulability: Risk Factors

• recent surgery • tissue factor exposure,

especially orthopedic)• total hip replacement: 25% w/o

prophylaxis (3-4% fatal)• -reduced 30-50% with prophylaxis• traumatic hip fx: 50%• total knee replacement: 60%

• fractures or other traumas

Page 70: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Virchow’s Classic Triad

• THREE MAJOR ELEMENTS – that promote thrombosis

– Endothelial injury

– Decrease in blood flow

– Imbalance between procoagulants and anticoagulants

• (Hypercoagulable state)

Page 71: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Endothelial Injury

• Mechanical trauma

• Atherosclerosis- (intrinsic pathway)

• Endotoxins from bacteria

• Proteases & cytokines of inflammation

• Immune-autoimmune

• Hypoxia

Page 72: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Decrease in Blood Flow

• Heart failure (HF)-causes stasis

• Atrial fib/flutter,

• Myocardial infarction

• Immobilization

• Long travel & long flight – • “economy class syndrome”

• Casting

• Bedridden (stroke)

Page 73: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Thrombophilia (hypercoagulable)

• GENETIC:– 5 – 8 % of population has one genetic clotting disorder;

25-50% will have F. V Leiden

• AGE: at onset < 50 yrs.• IDENTIFIABLE RISK FACTORS: may be none

– Frequently triggered by 2nd risk factor

• FAMILY HISTORY: frequently positive• PAST HISTORY: recurrent events• get into trouble when 2nd risk factor is present

Page 74: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

INHERITED Hypercoagulable Disorders

• activated Protein C resistance– (Factor V Leiden genetic mutation)– 25% in pt w/ family hx of thrombosis– 5% of white population;– #1 cause of inherited thrombophilia– named for city in Netherlands

• Hyper-homocysteinemia - (under debate)• Antithrombin III deficiency• Protein C deficiency (1:100)• Protein S deficiency• prothrombin 20210 mutation -altered thrombin

production

Page 75: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

ACQUIRED Hypercoagulable Disorders

• ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID ANTIBODY SYNDROME:– found in some cases of SLE, syphilis, rheumatoid arthritis

• ACQUIRED HYPERCOAGULABLE STATE – physiologic or thrombogenic stimulus

• acute-phase reactants from inflammation• advanced age (fibrinogen levels increase)• OCP, pregnancy• surgery, trauma

– hypercoagulable state from other disease• Malignancy,• renal- nephrotic syndrome, • “thick blood”-polycythemia, Sickle Cell

Page 76: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Treatment of Venous Thromboembolism

• RISK STRATIFY

• LOW risk & clearly identifiable cause– 3 months oral anticoagulation

• MEDIUM risk– 6 months oral anticoagulation

• HIGH risk– life long anticoagulation w/ INR - 2-3

Page 77: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Treatment for Hypercoagulation• ANTICOAGULANTS:

• heparin, low-molecular heparin, warfarin (Coumadin)

• PLATELET ANTAGONISTS• INACTIVATES COX – • necessary for production of Thromboxane A2

– Aspirin –irreversibly

– NSAIDS: reversible inactivation of platelets• ADP INHIBITIORS

– Ticlopidine-Ticlid– Clopidogrel-Plavix

• IIB/IIIA INHIBITORS (INHIBIT PLATELET AGGREGATION)– Abciximab(Reopro), Eptifibatide(Integrilin) – Tirofiban (Aggrastat)

• FIBRINOLYTIC AGENTS• Streptokinase, urokinase, tissue plasminogen activators (t-PA)

Page 78: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Heparin-Low molecular weight

• LMWH - depolymerized (fractionated)– more reliable, predictable– Monitoring PTT not required– SQ administration; outpatient therapy possible– Pregnancy-prophylaxis only- 2 & 3 trimester– lower risk of thrombocytopenia– Enoxaparin(Lovenox), Dalteparin (Fragmin)

Page 79: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Coumadin (warfarin)

• reduce clotting of the blood via blocking the production of Factors VII, IX, X, and II; competes w/ Vitamin K uptake and recycling by the liver

• PO, daily• Indications: DVT/PE, AFib, mechanical

valve replacement• - must follow PT/INR• Caution: when using platelet inhibitory Rx

Page 80: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Dabigatran-PRADAXA

• Direct Thrombin inhibitor– No Protime necessary

• Indications: – Stroke prevention, DVT Treatment

• Problems:– Bleeding– Renal adjustment necessay

Page 81: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

INDICATIONS for THROMBOLYTICS –

”CLOT BUSTERS”

• Acute myocardial infarction (AMI)

• Deep vein thrombosis (DVT)

• Pulmonary embolism (PE)

• Acute ischemic stroke (AIS)

• Acute peripheral arterial occlusion

• Occlusion of indwelling catheters

Page 82: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Contraindications to Thrombolytics• history of hemorrhagic stroke < 2 months• CNS neoplasm, AV malformation, or aneurysm, or

CNS surgery < 2months• Severe uncontrolled hypertension (over 200/130 or

complicated by retinovascular disease or encephalopathy)

• ongoing (active) bleeding• s/p recent significant surgery• known bleeding disorder• MI due to aortic dissection• allergy to agent planned• many relative contraindications

Page 83: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

Thrombolytics – clot busters

• FIBRIN-SPECIFIC AGENTS– Alteplase (t-PA) Activase, t-PA– Retaplase (recombinant-PA) Retavase– Tenecteplase TNKase

• NON–FIBRIN-SPECIFIC AGENTS-– Urokinase or Prourokinase (direct

plasminogen cleavage) - nonallergenic– Streptokinase- allergenic- inexpensive

Page 84: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

DISSEMINATED INTRAVASCULAR

COAGULATION

DIC

Page 85: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

DISSEMINATED INTRAVASCULAR COAGULATION

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DICClinical: Hemorrhage - internal and external

Mucosal“shock”Petechia/purpura

Labs:• thrombocytopenia• normal or slightly prolonged aPT• prolonged aPTT• Low Fibrinogen levels• FIBRIN SPLIT PRODUCTS PRESENT• RBC’s – Helmet cells/schiztocytes(fragmented)

– Due to RBC’s being cut up by Fibrin strands

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Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia

• Mechanical shearing of the RBC as they is cut by fibrin strands

Page 90: Bleeding & Clotting Disorders I

DIC -TREATMENT• Treatment should primarily focus on

addressing the underlying disorder.• Monitor vital signs, assess and document

extent of hemorrhage and thrombosis, correct hypovolemia, and administer basic hemostatic procedures-ICU-Transfer

• Platelet and factor replacement.as indicated- Fresh frozen plasma

• HEPARIN should be provided to those patients who demonstrate extensive fibrin deposition without evidence of substantial hemorrhage