Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Disorders of Hemostasis Sultana Qureshi, PGY-2 Resident Rounds March 1, 2007 Thanks to Adam Oster for some slides! Goals Approach and when to be suspicious Pattern of presentation ED Management – when to use blood products Hemostasis Endothelial cells Platelets Blood flow & vasoconstrictors Clotting cascade Fibrinolysis Approach to Bleeding Disorders Primary Hemostasis Exposed endothelial cells cause platelets to aggregate and form plug Platelet Disorders ITP TTP Also partially in liver disease, vWD Secondary Hemostasis Tissue factor iniates coagulation cascade eventually leading to fibrinogen forming fibrin cross links Extrinsic starts pathway, intrinsic sustains Coagulation Disorders vWD Hemophilia A & B Other – consumptive (DIC) When to be suspicious Petechiae, Purpura, Ecchymosis Nature of bleeding/sites Significant or multiple episodes Signs of previous bleeding Medications (anti-coagulants) Associated disease: liver disease, sepsis Massive transfusion FHx Other important historical/physical info to know??? Approach to Bleeding Disorders Platelet Disorder Immediate onset Superficial bleeding Petechiae/Ecchymoses (mucocutaneous) GI/GU bleeding Menorrhagia, epistaxis, melena Plt or Bleeding Time abn PT/PTT N Coagulation Factor Disorder Delayed onset (hours/days) Deep bleeding Intramuscular Intraarticular Retroperitoneal Hematuria Hemarthrosis/hematomas Less common to have menorrhagia, epistaxis, etc Plt and BT N PT/PTT abn Labs CBC, plts PTT (intrinsic) – I, II, V, VII, IX, X, XI, XII INR (extrinsic)– I , II, V, VII, X Peripheral smear Fibrinogen D-dimer FDP Factor levels Thrombin time What and how do you measure bleeding time? When is it useful? Blood Products Platelets – 1 unit raise value by 5-10 Cryoprecipitate – FVIII, vWF, fibrinogen, fibronectin FFP – contains all coagulation factors (about 7% of a 70kg person) Case 25F – 32 wks GA presents with decr. LOC Husband states had intermittent abdo pain X 2 days, suddenly got worse today Vitals: 120, 90/50, 18, 99% 2L NP, 36.5 Doppler – fetal bradycardia Uterus is tender and tense DIC - Causes • Sepsis/severe infection (any microorganism) • Vascular abnormalities –Kasabach-Merritt Syndrome –large vascular aneurysms • Trauma (eg, polytrauma, neurotrauma, fat embolism) • Severe hepatic failure • Organ destruction (eg,severe pancreatitis) • Malignancy –solid tumors –myeloproliferative/ lymphoproliferative • Severe toxic or immunologic reactions –snake bites –recreational drugs –transfusion reactions –transplant rejection • Obstetrical calamities –amniotic fluid embolism –abruptio placentae Hypothermia Acidosis Pathophysiology Unifying cause relates to widespread endothelial damage with extensive cytokine release DIC is a spectrum, may have thrombosis or bleeding or both Activation of procoagulant pathway Endothelial damage Liver disease, splenectomy Vascular stasis Sepsis, vasculitis, aneurysm, hemangioma Reticuloendothelial injury Hemolysis, tissue injury, malignancy, fat embolism, heat stroke Hypotension, hypovolemia, PE Other Acute hypoxia/acidosis Clinical Features Signs of Microvascular Thrombosis (10-40%) Neuro Skin ARDS GI Oliguria, azotemia, cortical necrosis Pulmonary Focal ischemia, superficial gangrene Renal Multifocal, delirium, coma, seizures Acute ulceration RBC Microangiopathic hemolysis Signs of hemorrhagic diasthesis (more common) Neuro Skin Petechiae, echymosis, oozing Renal IC bleed hematuria Mucosal Gingival oozing, epistaxis, massive bleed Labs Consumptive Coagulopathy ↓Plts ↑PT, ↑PTT ↓Fibrinogen (careful in sepsis) +D-dimer (DIC) DIC Scoring System Bakhtiari K et al. Critical Care Med. 2004;32:2416-2421. Step 1. Risk assessment: does the patient have an underlying disorder known to be associated with overt DIC? If yes, proceed. If no, do not use this algorithm. Step 2. Order global coagulation tests: platelet count, prothrombin time (PT), fibrinogen, soluble fibrin monomers, or fibrin degradation products. Step 3. Score global coagulation test results: • platelet count (> 100 = 0, < 100 = 1, < 50 = 2) • elevated fibrin-related marker (eg, soluble fibrin monomers/fibrin degradation products) no increase: 0; moderate increase: 2; strong increase: 3* • prolonged prothrombin time (< 3 sec. = 0, > 3 but < 6 sec = 1, > 6 sec = 2) • fibrinogen level (> 1.0 g/L = 0, < 1.0 g/L = 1) Step 4. Calculate score. Step 5. If ≥5: compatible with overt DIC; repeat scoring daily. If <5: suggestive (not affirmative) for non-overt DIC; repeat next 1–2 days. * In the prospective validation studies, D-dimer assays were used and a value above the upper limit of normal was considered moderately elevated; whereas, a value above five times the upper limit of normal was considered a strong increase. DIC Scoring System Bakhtiari K et al. Critical Care Med. 2004;32:2416-2421. Sens 93% Spec 96% Management TREAT UNDERLYING CAUSE!!! Blood Products Only if active bleeding or high risk of bleeding (ie. early post op or pre-invasive procedure) Platelets Bleeding – tranfuse if count <50 No bleeding – transfuse if <10-20 FFP Cryoprecipitate If fibrinogen <2 1-4U/10 kg Novel treatments APC – up to Phase III trials show benefit in septic DIC TFPI – promising ATIII- RCT promising Heparin Only case series. Controversial Therapeutically if overt venous TE or purpura fulminans Case 22M presents with seizures, decr. LOC, jaundice and fever Purpuric rash over body V: 60, 110/70, 16, 96% RA, T=38.3 Hb 90, WBC 8.0, plt 20 PT/PTT N Cr 130, small hematuria T.bili 60 other LFTs N, LDH 500 Ddx? D-dimer/fibrinogen? TTP Main ED mgmt point: NO platelet transfusion unless life threatening hemorrhage Liver Disease What mechanisms of coagulopathy? What blood products to use? Liver Disease Why they bleed? Thrombocytopenia from hypersplenism (portal HTN) Platelet dysfunction Reduction in absorption of Vit K dependant factors (2, 7, 9, 10) Reduction in synthesis of most factors Dysfibrinogenemia (abn fibrinogen synthesis) Enhanced fibrinolysis (decr. Plasmin inhibitor) In bleeding ER – may require transfusion of many different products (RBC, plts, FFP, cryo) Vs. DIC??? Case 6F with epistaxis (has had multiple mild episodes in past 2d) Also history of spitting up blood in morning Examine mouth and see blood oozing from gums when scraped with tongue depressor Otherwise well other than flu 3 weeks ago Notice petechiae around sock elastic Dx? Lab results? Acute ITP Usually children 2-6 M=F Usually have had recent infection Abrupt onset of bleeding (vs insidious) Platelets <20 Usually lasts week 80% spontaneous remission Management: IVIG if bleeding significant of plts <10 -splenectomy in very severe cases Chronic ITP MCC of isolated thrombocytopenia Adults (20-40 yo), F>M (3:1) No precipitating infection Insidious bleeding (heavy periods, easy bruising) Plt 30-80 May last months to years, and uncommon spont. Remission Mgmt: steroids, IVIG, splenectomy Need w/u for other causes of thrombocytopenia! Esp if older (ie malignancy)- Smear Major concern is cerebral hemorrhage is plt<5 Platelet Disorders Quantitative Destruction Immune Decreased Production Qualitative Sequestration Non-immune splenomegaly ITP TTP DIC HELLP Sepsis Marrow failure ASA, plavix rena and hepatic disease, vWD Case 12F hx of VWD Presents with heavy menarche (ongoing bleeding for >7 days) Pale, asymptomatic Hb = 60 Mgmt? Erik Adolf von Willebrand 1870-1949 Finnish Pediatrician “known for integrity and modesty” Hjordis – 5 yo girl with FHx of bleeding disorders Von Willebrand’s Disease AD Qualitative vs. quantitative abn Different sized multimers vWF has 2 jobs Platelet adhesion, carrier for Factor VIII New Classification Type 1: mild quantitative defect (75%) Type 2: qualitative defect (impaired fxn)20% Type 3: severe total quantitative defect (rare) Management Type 1 Usually mild symptoms (mucocutaneous bleeding sources) Mgmt: DDAVP 0.2 mcg/kg IV/IM/IN Type 2 or 3 More likely to have mod-severe symptoms incl. soft tissue hematomas, GI bleeds, hemarthroses Mgmt: Cryoprecipitate +/- DDAVP +/- Humate P Case 50M slipped on ice and twisted R knee On exam: large hemarthrosis What is most likely hemostatic disorder? Management? Hemophilia A – FVIII deficiency B – FIX deficiency X-linked recessive Mild/mod/severe is based on factor activity 5-30%, 1-5%, <1% PTT prolonged (if factor activity <30%) PT N However, if mild hemophilia, PTT may be N Bleeding first noticed usually in early years 5 Hs: Hemarthroses Hematomas Hematochezia Hematuria Head hemmorhage Recurrent hemarthroses lead to joint damage IC bleed is major cause of death Also, tend to bleed LATE – days after minor injury Therefore treat aggressively Goal to achieve 30-100% factor activity Options: Specific factor replacement, cryo, FFP Consider: Severity of bleeding, disease severity and availability of products Always consider factor activity is zero in ED!!! Factor Replacement Is ideal if available in ED, otherwise cryo 1U/kg will increase factor by 2% May develop alloantibodies and need 3-4X predicted dose Goals: Mild: 5-10% activity desired -initial dose 12.5U/kg Mod 20-30% - 25U/kg Severe >50% - 50U/kg Cryoprecipitate Contains 80- 100U FVIII (als contains vWF, fibrinogen, FXIII and fibronectin) Considered a second line agent for Hem A Dose = 2bags/10kg to raise FVIII to hemostatic levels T ½ = 8hrs FFP Fluid portion of blood separated at 18C then frozen Contains all coagulation factors Approx 7% of of all coag factor activity of a 70kg person Not routinely used as factor replacement in Hem A Could consider if nothing else available Case 25M hemophiliac Tripped on stairs and fell from 1ft height Hit head on floor. No LOC, NV. Feels fine Management? Mgmt All hemophiliacs with any trauma need admission for observation Minor head trauma can be life threatening Give Factor VIII to 50% activity BEFORE CT Take Home Points Approach to bleeding disorders High index of suspicion Difference in presentation of platelet dysfunction vs. coagulation factor d/o When to give blood products? Take Home Points DIC – treat underlying cause vWF – important to know type Hemophilia – aggressive therapy with factors Quiz Which of the following is least likely due to a platelet disorder? A) Epistaxis B) Retroperitoneal Bleeding C) Ecchymoses D) Petechiae Quiz Which is least likely associated with coagulation factor deficiency? A) Intra-articular bleeding B) Delayed bleeding C) Retroperitoneal Bleeding D) Petechiae Quiz Which clinical finding is MOST COMMONLY associated with the onset of ITP? A) Ecchymoses B) Purpura C) Petechiae D) Gingival bleeding Quiz Which of the following are true of chronic ITP? A) More likely in female children B) Spontaneous remission typical C) Underlying disorder is autoimmune D) Platelet transfusion is initial, definitive therapy Quiz Which lab finding is more indicative of liver disease vs DIC? A) Thrombocytopenia with bleeding B) Prolonged PT C) Decreased fibrinogen D) Normal or min. elevated D-dimer Quiz 50M cirrhotic with ascites presents with SBP. HD stable and no active bleeding Prolonged PTT, INR Low platelets and fibrinogen What to give prior to paracentesis? A) Cryo B)FFP C)Platelets D)DDAVP Quiz Most commonly observed lab abnormality in DIC? A) Long PTT B) Thrombocytopenia C) Low fibrinogen D) elevated D-dimer Quiz What is the most appropriate analgesic for a patient with Type 1 vWD? 1) ASA 80 2) ASA 325 3) Ibuprofen 4) Acetaminophen 5) Naprosyn Quiz 9M with Type 1 vWD presents with mild gingival bleeding after flossing. Stable, however slow bleeding has continued for hours despite local pressure Most appropriate treatment? Quiz 19M restrained back seat passenger, rear ended at 35 kph. Hit head on front seatback. No LOC. No neck pain. Ambulatory on scene. Exam normal except small contusion to forehead. History of Hemophilia B Mgmt? Quiz 7M presents with LLQ pain after being “knee’ed” by a bully at school 2 hours ago History of Hemophilia A “severe” VSS, contusion in L inguinal area, mildly tender Pain with extension of lower extremity, and walks flexed at the torso with a limp Next step? A) Give Factor VIII and CT Abdo B) Give Factor IX and CT Abdo C) Give DDAVP and CT D) Give FFP and US Abdo