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HEMOSTASIS, SURGICAL
BLEEDING, AND
TRANSFUSION
Trix M. Asuncion MD.
General Surgery
Objectives
 To discuss the basic biology of hemostasis
and enumerate common congenital and
acquired hemostatic defects
 To discuss the basic principles of transfusion
and its indications
 To discuss bleeding in the intraoperative and
postoperative setting
HEMOSTASIS
Hemostasis
 Function is to limit blood loss from an injured
vessel
1. Vasoconstriction
 Initial vascular response to injury
Endotheli
n
Thromboxane A2 – synthesized from
arachidonic acid from platelet
membranes
Endothelin – released from injured
endothelium
Serotonin - released during platelet
aggregation
Bradykinin and fibrinopeptides
TxA
2 5-
HT
1. Vasoconstriction
 Dependent on local contraction of smooth
muscle
 more pronounced in vessels with medial smooth
muscles
 Varies with the degree of vessel injury
2. Platelet Plug Formation
Platelets
• Anucleate fragments of
megakaryocytes
• Play an integral role in
hemostasis by forming a
hemostatic plug and by
contributing to thrombin
formation
• Life span 7-10 days
• Nomal range: 150 – 400 (x10³ /µL)
• Effective hemostasis can still
happen with as low as 50 x10³
/µL
STEPS IN PLATELET PLUG
FORMATION
1. Primary Hemostasis
• Endothelial injury
exposes the
subendothelial
collagen
• Platelets adhere to the
collagen through the
von Willebrand’s
factor which binds to
the collagen and
glycoprotein I/IX/V on
the platelet membranes
ADP & Serotonin are the primary mediators in platelet aggregation
Heparin does not interfere in this reaction
Arachidonic acid release PLATELET MEMBRANES Arachidonic acid Pr
(Vasodilator/inhibit Plt Aggregt’n
Prostaglandin Thromboxane (Vasoconstrictor/Platelet aggregation
Arachidonic acid metabolism
 cyclooxygenase
 Irreversibly inhibited by Asprin
 Reversibly blocked by NSAIDs
 Not affected by COX-2 inhibitors
STEPS IN PLATELET PLUG
FORMATION
2. Second wave of platelet aggregation
 The adhered platelets initiate a release
reaction to recruit other platelets (ADP, Ca2+,
serotonin, TXA2, and α-granule proteins)
 The release reaction has two outcomes
 1. Recruitment of more platelets
 2. compaction of the platelet plug making the process no
longer reversible
 Platelets are bound together by fibrinogen
linking together glycoprotein IIb / IIIa receptors
on activated platelets
STEPS IN PLATELET PLUG
FORMATION
 Secretion of thrombospondin
 Released by α -granule
 Stabilizes fibrinogen binding to activated platelet
surface and strengthens platelet-platelet interactions
 Secretion of Platelet factor 4 (PF4) and β-
thromboglobulin
 PF4 is a potent heparin antagonist
 Second wave Plt. Aggregation is Inhibited by:
 Aspirin
 NSAIDS
 cAMP
 NO
3. COAGULATION
 Involves two pathways that leads into one
common pathway that catalyzes the formation
of fibrin
Clot formation
Prothrombin Time
Partial Thromboplastin
Time
Intrinsic vs Extrinsic
Intrinsic Pathway Extrinsic Pathway
Primary factors are ‘intrinsic’ to the
plasma
Requires Tissue Factor (TF) released
during subendothelial injury
II, IX, X, XI, XII , VIII II, VII, X
PTT PT
Common Pathway
• Leads to activation of prothrombin to thrombin in the
presence of calcium, factor V, and platelet
phospholipids
• Needs prothrombin activator (factor Xa) produced
from the 2 pathways
Extrinsic Pathway
Intrinsic Pathway
Formation of Fibrin
Thrombin Fibrinogen
Fibrin
Fibrinopeptide
A
Fibrinopeptide B
• Fibrinopeptide A removal: permits
end-end polymerization of fibrin
• Fibrinopeptide B removal: allows
side-side polymerization of fibrin
• Fibrin formation leads to clotting
• Stabilized by thrombin activatable
fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI)
MEMBRANE
SURFACE
REGULATION OF THE
COAGULATION CASCADE
 Feedback inhibition
 Enzymes leading to thrombin formation are
deactivated as a feedback
 Fibrinolysis
 Breakdown of the fibrin clot and subsequent repair of
the injured vessel with deposition of connective
tissue are triggered
 Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI)
 Blocks extrinsic tissue factor-VIIa complex
 Antithrombin III
 neutralizes procoagulant proteases and weakly
inhibits tissue factor-VIIa complex
REGULATION OF THE
COAGULATION CASCADE
 Protein-C System
 Thrombin binds to thrombomodulin and activates
protein-C to activated protein C (APC), which then
forms a complex with its cofactor, protein S, on a
phospholipid surface
 The APC–protein S complex cleaves factors Va and
VIIIa
 So they are NO longer able to participate in the
formation of tissue factor VIIa or prothrombinase
complexes
 Factor V Leiden
 Genetic mutation in factor V; a variant of factor V
 Resistant to cleavage by activated protein-C (APC)
predisposing them to venous thromboembolic events
4. Fibrinolysis
 As part of the wound-healing process, the
fibrin clot undergoes lysis
 Breakdown of the clot within the lumen of
the vessel permits restoration of blood flow,
the fibrin clot in the vessel may be replaced
with connective tissue
 Initiated at the same time as the clotting
mechanism under the influence of circulating
kinases, tissue activators, and kallikrein that
are present in many organs including the
vascular endothelium.
4. Fibrinolysis
 Bradykinin- endothelial-dependent
vasodilator
 HMWK(high molecular weight kininogen by
kallikren- enhances the release of tPA.
 Alpha-antiplasmin- inhibit plasmin
 Ensure that clot lysis does not occur too quickly.
 Circulating plasmin is inhibited by:
 Alpha-antiplasmin
 tPA
 urokinase
4. Fibrinolysis
FIBRIN is degraded by plasmin
 PLASMIN comes from PLASMINOGEN
 Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is
synthesized by endothelial cells and
released by thrombin stimulation
 Urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) is
synthesized by endothelial cells and
urothelium
FDP=FIBRIN DEGRADATION PRODUCTS
D-DIMERS- marker for thrombosis if (+) in circulati
E-NODULES
CONGENITAL HEMOSTATIC
DEFECTS (HEMOPHILIA)
Hemophili
a A
Hemophili
a B
(Christma
s disease
Hemophili
a C
Factor VIII
deficiency
Factor IX
deficiency
Factor XI
deficiency
80% of
cases
20% of
cases
Prevalent
in
Ashkenazi
Jewish
population
X-linked
recessive
X-linked
recessive
Autosomal
recessive
Spontaneo
us
bleeding,
easy
Spontaneo
us
Bleeding,
easy
Spontaneo
us bleeding
is rare
DETERMINATION OF CLINICAL SEVERITY
THROUGH MEASURABLE PLASMA LEVEL
PLATELET
FACTOR
LEVELS
SEVERITY BLEEDING CONSEQUENCES
Less than 1% Severe Spontaneous bleeding
1% to 5 % Moderate Less spontaneous bleeding;
Bleed severely during
trauma or surgery
5% to 30% Mild Minor bleeding after major
trauma or surgery
VON WILLEBRAND’S DISEASE
(VWD)
 Low (↓) Factor VIII; primary defect is low (↓)
vWF
 MOST COMMON congenital bleeding disorder
 Autosomal dominant
 Bleeding that is characteristic of platelet
disorders
 Easy bruising
 Mucosal bleeding, menorrhagia in women
VON WILLEBRAND’S DISEASE
(VWD)
Two functions of VW
factor:
 Carrier for Factor VIII
 For normal platelet
adhesion to exposed
subendothelium
Three types:
 Type 1 – Partial
Quantitative Deficiency
 Type 2 – Qualitative
Deficiency
 Type 3 – Total
Deficiency
DEFICIENCY OF FACTORS II
(PROTHROMBIN), V AND X
 RARE disorders
 ALL are inherited as autosomal recessive
traits
 Factor V is less stable in plasma
 Deficiency in this factor may be
accompanied with factor VIII deficiency.
 Half life of prothrombin (Factor II) is 72 hrs
 Half life of Factor X is 48 hrs
 Treatment: Fresh Frozen Plasma
FACTOR VII DEFICIENCY
 RARE autosomal recessive disorder
 Bleeding is uncommon unless plasma levels is <
3%
 The most common bleeding manifestations are:
 Easy bruising
 Mucosal bleeding (epistaxis or oral bleeding)
 Postoperative bleeding
 Half life: 4hrs in fresh frozen plasma (FFP)
FACTOR XIII DEFICIENCY
 RARE; autosomal recessive; 1:1 (M:F)
 Associated with Severe bleeding diathesis
 Bleeding typically delayed (clot is formed but
susceptible to fibrinolysis)
 S/Sx: Umbilical stump bleeding; Spontaneous
abortion usual in women; High risk of
intracranial bleeding
 Half life in FFP: 9-14 days
 Treatment: Fresh Frozen Plasma,
Cryoprecipitatae, or Factor XIII concentrate
PLATELET FUNCTIONAL
DEFECTS
 Inherited functional defects
 Abnormalities of platelet surface proteins
 Thrombasthenia (Glanzmann’s disease)
 Absence of glycoproteins (1B, 2A) receptor for
fibrinogen and vWD
 Platelets do not aggregate
 Gp IIb/IIIa complex is either lacking or present but
dysfunctional
 Treatment: Platelet Transfusion
 Bernard Soullier Syndrome
 Defect in glycoprotein (1B,9,5) receptor for vWD that is
necessary for platelet adhesion to subendothelium
 Treatment: Platelet Transfusion
PLATELET FUNCTIONAL
DEFECTS
 Abnormalities of platelet granules (intrinsic
platelet defects or storage pool disease)
 Loss of dense granules (storage sites for ADP,
ATP, Ca+2, inorganic phosphate)
 Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome
 Loss of α-granules (storage for PF4, β
thromboglobulin)
 Gray Platelet Syndrome
PLATELET FUNCTIONAL
DEFECTS
Enzyme defects
 Cyclooxygenase deficiency
Quantitative Platelet Defects
 Due to failure of platelet production
brought about by marrow
 Inherited thrombocytopenia is rare
 Related diseases, shortened platelet survival
ACQUIRED HEMOSTATIC
DEFECTS
PLATELET ABNORMALITIES
 Failure of production
 General Marrow Disorder - leukemia,
myelodysplastic syndrome, severe vitamin B12 or
folate deficiency, chemotherapeutic drugs,
radiation, acute ethanol intoxication, or viral
infection
ACQUIRED HEMOSTATIC
DEFECTS
Shortened platelet survival
 Immune thrombocytopenia
 Disseminated intravascular coagulation
(DIC), thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
(TTP), and hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)
 Drugs (heparin, quinidine, quinine gold
salts sulfonamides, valproic acid, chorthiazide)
ACQUIRED HEMOSTATIC
DEFECTS
Sequestration
 Sequestration of platelets in an enlarged
spleen from any cause (portal hypertension,
sarcoid, lymphoma, Gauchers disease)
 Total body platelet mass is normal but larger
fraction of platelet mass is sequestered in the
spleen
 Thrombocytopenia is the MOST COMMON
abnormality of hemostasis that results in
bleeding in the surgical patient.
ACQUIRED
HYPOFIBRINOGEMIA
 Defibrination syndrome - DIC
 Pathologic fibrinolysis in metastatic prostate
carcinoma, sepsis, shock, portal hypertension,
neoplasia, cirrhosis
 Myeloproliferative diseases - marked
thrombocytosis in polycythemia vera
 Coagulapathy of liver disease - ALL
coagulation factors synthesized by hepatocytes
 Acquired coagulation inhibitors - lupus
anticoagulant (Russels viper venom test), factor
VIII inhibitors
Other causes:
 Paraprotein disorders - abnormal globulin
or fibrinogen that interferes with clotting or
platelet function
 Hypersplenism - oversequestration of
platelets
 Anticoagulation and bleeding
 Treatment with anticoagulants such as
heparin, warfarin, factor Xa inhibitors
 Manifests as ecchymosis, petechiae,
hematoma
Other causes:
 Cardiopulmonary bypass - over
heparinization, thrombocytopenia, protamine
excess
 Coagulopathy of Trauma
 Caused by shock and tissue injury
 Hypoperfusion  release of TM from endothelial cells
 Thrombin+TM complex  activation of protein C,
enhancement of fibrinlysis, and decrease in the
conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin.
VITAMIN K
 Factors II, VII, IX, and X need Vitamin K
for its production in the liver
 Coumadin (warfarin) inhibits production of
Vitamin K in the gut
 Antibiotics result in deficiency by killing
Vitamin K producing bacteria in the gut
BLEEDING PARAMETERS
Bleeding Time
 The MOST RELIABLE in vivo test of hemostatic
function
 Tests platelet function
Prothrombin time (PT)
 Measures the extrinsic and common pathway of
coagulation
 International Normalized Ratio (INR)
 INR = PTpatient/PTnormal = 0.8-1.2 seconds
 Reference range of PT is 12 to 15 seconds
 Measures Factors VII, X, V, II (prothrombin), I
(fibrinogen)
BLEEDING PARAMETERS
Activated partial thromboplastin time (aptt)
 Measures the intrinsic and common
pathway of coagulation
 Measures factors XII, high molecular
weight kininogen (HWMK), prekallikrein,
XI, IX, VII, X, V, II, and I
BLEEDING PARAMETERS
Thrombin Time
 Measures the time it takes to form a clot in
the plasma from a blood sample with an
anticoagulant and an excess of thrombin
 Assessment of fibrinogen pathology
 Diagnosis bleeding disorders and assess
fibrinolytic therapy
EXCESSIVE BLEEDING IN AN
INTRAOPERATIVE AND
POSTOPERATIVE PATIENT
Surgical Bleeding
 Ineffective hemostasis
 blood transfusion
 undetected
hemostatic defect
 consumptive
coagulopathy
 fibrinolysis
 Excessive bleeding
from the operative
field
 To prevent further blood loss from a disrupted
vessel that has been incised or transected by
interrupting the flow of blood to the involved area
or by direct closure of the blood vessel
 Digital pressure
 Ligation – small vessels
 Transfixion suture – pulsating arteries
 Direct pressure (Packing) – diffuse bleeding
 Thermal Agents
 Topical Agents
Mechanical Hemostasis
Bleeding due to Transfusion
 Thrombocytopenia
 Hypothermia
 Dilutional coagulopathy
 Platelet dysfunction
 Fibrinolysis
 Hypofibrinogenemia
 Hemolytic transfusion reaction
Bleeding due to Disseminated
Intravascular Coagulopathy
 Systemic activation of the coagulation system
 deposition of fibrin clots and microvascular
ischemia and may contribute to the development
of multiorgan failure
 Exhaustion of coagulation proteins and platelets
may result in bleeding complications
Bleeding due to Sepsis
 Gram-negative sepsis may result in
thrombocytopenia
 Meningococcemia, Clostridium perfringens
sepsis, and staphylococcal sepsis may result
in defibrination and hemostatic failure
TRANSFUSION
Introduction
 First widely accepted during the late 19th
century
 Widely used in world war I
 Whole blood was the standard therapy until
the 1970s when blood component therapy
became available
 Breakthroughs
 Landsteiner (1900) – discovery of the ABO
grouping
 Levine and Stetson (1939) – discovery of the Rh
grouping
Replacement Therapy
 Typing and Cross-matching
 The basis of blood transfusion
 In principle a person can only be transfused with the blood
of the same ABO and Rh group
 This is why cross-matching b/w the donor’s RBC and the
recipient’s sera is necessary before transfusion
 However in emergency situations blood type O- can be
transfused to all patients and an Rh- person can be transfused
with an Rh+ blood
 Autologous transfusion
• Up to 5 units (1st is at 40 days before and the last is at 3
days before the surgery)
• The patient should have at least a Hgb of 11mg/dL and a
Hct of 34
Replacement Therapy
Form Advantages Disadvantages Others
Whole Blood -Once the gold
standard
-Rarely used today
-Difficult to store
-related to adverse
inflammatory response
and multiple organ
failure
- Shelf life =
42 days
- Low RBC
viabiltity
RBCS - product of choice for
most clinical situations
requiring resuscitation
- reduces reactions
caused by plasma
componens
- Frozen RBCs are
not yet available for
emergencies
- Improved
RBC viability
Replacement Therapy
Form Advantage Disadvantage Others
Leukocyte-
Reduced and
Leukocyte-
Reduced/Washe
d Red
Blood Cells
- prevents almost all
febrile, nonhemolytic
transfusion reactions,
alloimmunization to
HLA I antigens, and
platelet transfusion
refractoriness and
CMV transmission
- Predisposition to
post-op bacterial
infection and
multiorgan failure
(according to some
studies)
- Standard
RBC product in
most
developed
countries
Fresh Frozen
Plasma
- usual source of the
vitamin K - dependent
factors and is the only
source of factor V
- Similar infectious risk
as other forms
- Better
availability than
other forms
Platelet
concentrates
- Used in
thrombocytopenia
Similar infectious risk
as other forms
Indications for Blood Replacement
and its Products
 Improvement of O2 carrying Capacity
 Anemia
 In the past - Hgb <10mg/dL and Hct <30 preop
 Today – Hgb <7-9mg/dL
 Volume Replacement
 Most common indication for blood transfusion in
surgical patients
 >20% blood loss in patients w/ normal lab values
Concepts in resuscitation
 OLD practice: Crystalloid RBC plasma
platelet(1970)
 NEW Concept: DAMAGE CONTROL
RESUSCITATION
 Aimed to halt and prevent rather than treating the
TRIAD OF DEATH (Coagulopathy, Acidosis,
Hypothermia)
 RATIONALE:
 Old: high incidence of truncal hemorrhage and
deaths in Trauma which can potentially be
prevented.
 Received significant blood transfusion >4-6 units
DAMAGE CONTROL
RESUSCITATION
 Crystalloids packed RBC
Platelet/Plasma
 Components:
 Permissive hypotension (SBP= 60-80mmhg)
 Minimized crystalloid based resuscitation
 Blood products (RBC, Plasma, Platelet)
 Ratio: 1:1:1(RBC, Plasma, Platelet)
After liters of crystalloids
Complications of Transfusion
Complications of Transfusion
Complications of Transfusion
 Transmission of Infections
 CMV, Syphilis, HBV, HCV, HIV, etc.
THANK YOU!

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4. hemostasis, bleeding & BT.pptx

  • 1. HEMOSTASIS, SURGICAL BLEEDING, AND TRANSFUSION Trix M. Asuncion MD. General Surgery
  • 2. Objectives  To discuss the basic biology of hemostasis and enumerate common congenital and acquired hemostatic defects  To discuss the basic principles of transfusion and its indications  To discuss bleeding in the intraoperative and postoperative setting
  • 4. Hemostasis  Function is to limit blood loss from an injured vessel
  • 5. 1. Vasoconstriction  Initial vascular response to injury Endotheli n Thromboxane A2 – synthesized from arachidonic acid from platelet membranes Endothelin – released from injured endothelium Serotonin - released during platelet aggregation Bradykinin and fibrinopeptides TxA 2 5- HT
  • 6. 1. Vasoconstriction  Dependent on local contraction of smooth muscle  more pronounced in vessels with medial smooth muscles  Varies with the degree of vessel injury
  • 7. 2. Platelet Plug Formation Platelets • Anucleate fragments of megakaryocytes • Play an integral role in hemostasis by forming a hemostatic plug and by contributing to thrombin formation • Life span 7-10 days • Nomal range: 150 – 400 (x10³ /µL) • Effective hemostasis can still happen with as low as 50 x10³ /µL
  • 8. STEPS IN PLATELET PLUG FORMATION 1. Primary Hemostasis • Endothelial injury exposes the subendothelial collagen • Platelets adhere to the collagen through the von Willebrand’s factor which binds to the collagen and glycoprotein I/IX/V on the platelet membranes ADP & Serotonin are the primary mediators in platelet aggregation Heparin does not interfere in this reaction Arachidonic acid release PLATELET MEMBRANES Arachidonic acid Pr (Vasodilator/inhibit Plt Aggregt’n Prostaglandin Thromboxane (Vasoconstrictor/Platelet aggregation
  • 9. Arachidonic acid metabolism  cyclooxygenase  Irreversibly inhibited by Asprin  Reversibly blocked by NSAIDs  Not affected by COX-2 inhibitors
  • 10. STEPS IN PLATELET PLUG FORMATION 2. Second wave of platelet aggregation  The adhered platelets initiate a release reaction to recruit other platelets (ADP, Ca2+, serotonin, TXA2, and α-granule proteins)  The release reaction has two outcomes  1. Recruitment of more platelets  2. compaction of the platelet plug making the process no longer reversible  Platelets are bound together by fibrinogen linking together glycoprotein IIb / IIIa receptors on activated platelets
  • 11. STEPS IN PLATELET PLUG FORMATION  Secretion of thrombospondin  Released by α -granule  Stabilizes fibrinogen binding to activated platelet surface and strengthens platelet-platelet interactions  Secretion of Platelet factor 4 (PF4) and β- thromboglobulin  PF4 is a potent heparin antagonist  Second wave Plt. Aggregation is Inhibited by:  Aspirin  NSAIDS  cAMP  NO
  • 12. 3. COAGULATION  Involves two pathways that leads into one common pathway that catalyzes the formation of fibrin Clot formation Prothrombin Time Partial Thromboplastin Time
  • 13. Intrinsic vs Extrinsic Intrinsic Pathway Extrinsic Pathway Primary factors are ‘intrinsic’ to the plasma Requires Tissue Factor (TF) released during subendothelial injury II, IX, X, XI, XII , VIII II, VII, X PTT PT Common Pathway • Leads to activation of prothrombin to thrombin in the presence of calcium, factor V, and platelet phospholipids • Needs prothrombin activator (factor Xa) produced from the 2 pathways
  • 16. Formation of Fibrin Thrombin Fibrinogen Fibrin Fibrinopeptide A Fibrinopeptide B • Fibrinopeptide A removal: permits end-end polymerization of fibrin • Fibrinopeptide B removal: allows side-side polymerization of fibrin • Fibrin formation leads to clotting • Stabilized by thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) MEMBRANE SURFACE
  • 17. REGULATION OF THE COAGULATION CASCADE  Feedback inhibition  Enzymes leading to thrombin formation are deactivated as a feedback  Fibrinolysis  Breakdown of the fibrin clot and subsequent repair of the injured vessel with deposition of connective tissue are triggered  Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI)  Blocks extrinsic tissue factor-VIIa complex  Antithrombin III  neutralizes procoagulant proteases and weakly inhibits tissue factor-VIIa complex
  • 18. REGULATION OF THE COAGULATION CASCADE  Protein-C System  Thrombin binds to thrombomodulin and activates protein-C to activated protein C (APC), which then forms a complex with its cofactor, protein S, on a phospholipid surface  The APC–protein S complex cleaves factors Va and VIIIa  So they are NO longer able to participate in the formation of tissue factor VIIa or prothrombinase complexes  Factor V Leiden  Genetic mutation in factor V; a variant of factor V  Resistant to cleavage by activated protein-C (APC) predisposing them to venous thromboembolic events
  • 19. 4. Fibrinolysis  As part of the wound-healing process, the fibrin clot undergoes lysis  Breakdown of the clot within the lumen of the vessel permits restoration of blood flow, the fibrin clot in the vessel may be replaced with connective tissue  Initiated at the same time as the clotting mechanism under the influence of circulating kinases, tissue activators, and kallikrein that are present in many organs including the vascular endothelium.
  • 20. 4. Fibrinolysis  Bradykinin- endothelial-dependent vasodilator  HMWK(high molecular weight kininogen by kallikren- enhances the release of tPA.  Alpha-antiplasmin- inhibit plasmin  Ensure that clot lysis does not occur too quickly.  Circulating plasmin is inhibited by:  Alpha-antiplasmin  tPA  urokinase
  • 21. 4. Fibrinolysis FIBRIN is degraded by plasmin  PLASMIN comes from PLASMINOGEN  Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is synthesized by endothelial cells and released by thrombin stimulation  Urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) is synthesized by endothelial cells and urothelium
  • 22. FDP=FIBRIN DEGRADATION PRODUCTS D-DIMERS- marker for thrombosis if (+) in circulati E-NODULES
  • 23.
  • 24. CONGENITAL HEMOSTATIC DEFECTS (HEMOPHILIA) Hemophili a A Hemophili a B (Christma s disease Hemophili a C Factor VIII deficiency Factor IX deficiency Factor XI deficiency 80% of cases 20% of cases Prevalent in Ashkenazi Jewish population X-linked recessive X-linked recessive Autosomal recessive Spontaneo us bleeding, easy Spontaneo us Bleeding, easy Spontaneo us bleeding is rare
  • 25. DETERMINATION OF CLINICAL SEVERITY THROUGH MEASURABLE PLASMA LEVEL PLATELET FACTOR LEVELS SEVERITY BLEEDING CONSEQUENCES Less than 1% Severe Spontaneous bleeding 1% to 5 % Moderate Less spontaneous bleeding; Bleed severely during trauma or surgery 5% to 30% Mild Minor bleeding after major trauma or surgery
  • 26. VON WILLEBRAND’S DISEASE (VWD)  Low (↓) Factor VIII; primary defect is low (↓) vWF  MOST COMMON congenital bleeding disorder  Autosomal dominant  Bleeding that is characteristic of platelet disorders  Easy bruising  Mucosal bleeding, menorrhagia in women
  • 27. VON WILLEBRAND’S DISEASE (VWD) Two functions of VW factor:  Carrier for Factor VIII  For normal platelet adhesion to exposed subendothelium Three types:  Type 1 – Partial Quantitative Deficiency  Type 2 – Qualitative Deficiency  Type 3 – Total Deficiency
  • 28. DEFICIENCY OF FACTORS II (PROTHROMBIN), V AND X  RARE disorders  ALL are inherited as autosomal recessive traits  Factor V is less stable in plasma  Deficiency in this factor may be accompanied with factor VIII deficiency.  Half life of prothrombin (Factor II) is 72 hrs  Half life of Factor X is 48 hrs  Treatment: Fresh Frozen Plasma
  • 29. FACTOR VII DEFICIENCY  RARE autosomal recessive disorder  Bleeding is uncommon unless plasma levels is < 3%  The most common bleeding manifestations are:  Easy bruising  Mucosal bleeding (epistaxis or oral bleeding)  Postoperative bleeding  Half life: 4hrs in fresh frozen plasma (FFP)
  • 30. FACTOR XIII DEFICIENCY  RARE; autosomal recessive; 1:1 (M:F)  Associated with Severe bleeding diathesis  Bleeding typically delayed (clot is formed but susceptible to fibrinolysis)  S/Sx: Umbilical stump bleeding; Spontaneous abortion usual in women; High risk of intracranial bleeding  Half life in FFP: 9-14 days  Treatment: Fresh Frozen Plasma, Cryoprecipitatae, or Factor XIII concentrate
  • 31. PLATELET FUNCTIONAL DEFECTS  Inherited functional defects  Abnormalities of platelet surface proteins  Thrombasthenia (Glanzmann’s disease)  Absence of glycoproteins (1B, 2A) receptor for fibrinogen and vWD  Platelets do not aggregate  Gp IIb/IIIa complex is either lacking or present but dysfunctional  Treatment: Platelet Transfusion  Bernard Soullier Syndrome  Defect in glycoprotein (1B,9,5) receptor for vWD that is necessary for platelet adhesion to subendothelium  Treatment: Platelet Transfusion
  • 32. PLATELET FUNCTIONAL DEFECTS  Abnormalities of platelet granules (intrinsic platelet defects or storage pool disease)  Loss of dense granules (storage sites for ADP, ATP, Ca+2, inorganic phosphate)  Hermansky-Pudlak Syndrome  Loss of α-granules (storage for PF4, β thromboglobulin)  Gray Platelet Syndrome
  • 33. PLATELET FUNCTIONAL DEFECTS Enzyme defects  Cyclooxygenase deficiency Quantitative Platelet Defects  Due to failure of platelet production brought about by marrow  Inherited thrombocytopenia is rare  Related diseases, shortened platelet survival
  • 34. ACQUIRED HEMOSTATIC DEFECTS PLATELET ABNORMALITIES  Failure of production  General Marrow Disorder - leukemia, myelodysplastic syndrome, severe vitamin B12 or folate deficiency, chemotherapeutic drugs, radiation, acute ethanol intoxication, or viral infection
  • 35. ACQUIRED HEMOSTATIC DEFECTS Shortened platelet survival  Immune thrombocytopenia  Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP), and hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)  Drugs (heparin, quinidine, quinine gold salts sulfonamides, valproic acid, chorthiazide)
  • 36. ACQUIRED HEMOSTATIC DEFECTS Sequestration  Sequestration of platelets in an enlarged spleen from any cause (portal hypertension, sarcoid, lymphoma, Gauchers disease)  Total body platelet mass is normal but larger fraction of platelet mass is sequestered in the spleen  Thrombocytopenia is the MOST COMMON abnormality of hemostasis that results in bleeding in the surgical patient.
  • 37. ACQUIRED HYPOFIBRINOGEMIA  Defibrination syndrome - DIC  Pathologic fibrinolysis in metastatic prostate carcinoma, sepsis, shock, portal hypertension, neoplasia, cirrhosis  Myeloproliferative diseases - marked thrombocytosis in polycythemia vera  Coagulapathy of liver disease - ALL coagulation factors synthesized by hepatocytes  Acquired coagulation inhibitors - lupus anticoagulant (Russels viper venom test), factor VIII inhibitors
  • 38. Other causes:  Paraprotein disorders - abnormal globulin or fibrinogen that interferes with clotting or platelet function  Hypersplenism - oversequestration of platelets  Anticoagulation and bleeding  Treatment with anticoagulants such as heparin, warfarin, factor Xa inhibitors  Manifests as ecchymosis, petechiae, hematoma
  • 39. Other causes:  Cardiopulmonary bypass - over heparinization, thrombocytopenia, protamine excess  Coagulopathy of Trauma  Caused by shock and tissue injury  Hypoperfusion  release of TM from endothelial cells  Thrombin+TM complex  activation of protein C, enhancement of fibrinlysis, and decrease in the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin.
  • 40. VITAMIN K  Factors II, VII, IX, and X need Vitamin K for its production in the liver  Coumadin (warfarin) inhibits production of Vitamin K in the gut  Antibiotics result in deficiency by killing Vitamin K producing bacteria in the gut
  • 41. BLEEDING PARAMETERS Bleeding Time  The MOST RELIABLE in vivo test of hemostatic function  Tests platelet function Prothrombin time (PT)  Measures the extrinsic and common pathway of coagulation  International Normalized Ratio (INR)  INR = PTpatient/PTnormal = 0.8-1.2 seconds  Reference range of PT is 12 to 15 seconds  Measures Factors VII, X, V, II (prothrombin), I (fibrinogen)
  • 42. BLEEDING PARAMETERS Activated partial thromboplastin time (aptt)  Measures the intrinsic and common pathway of coagulation  Measures factors XII, high molecular weight kininogen (HWMK), prekallikrein, XI, IX, VII, X, V, II, and I
  • 43. BLEEDING PARAMETERS Thrombin Time  Measures the time it takes to form a clot in the plasma from a blood sample with an anticoagulant and an excess of thrombin  Assessment of fibrinogen pathology  Diagnosis bleeding disorders and assess fibrinolytic therapy
  • 44. EXCESSIVE BLEEDING IN AN INTRAOPERATIVE AND POSTOPERATIVE PATIENT
  • 45. Surgical Bleeding  Ineffective hemostasis  blood transfusion  undetected hemostatic defect  consumptive coagulopathy  fibrinolysis  Excessive bleeding from the operative field
  • 46.  To prevent further blood loss from a disrupted vessel that has been incised or transected by interrupting the flow of blood to the involved area or by direct closure of the blood vessel  Digital pressure  Ligation – small vessels  Transfixion suture – pulsating arteries  Direct pressure (Packing) – diffuse bleeding  Thermal Agents  Topical Agents Mechanical Hemostasis
  • 47. Bleeding due to Transfusion  Thrombocytopenia  Hypothermia  Dilutional coagulopathy  Platelet dysfunction  Fibrinolysis  Hypofibrinogenemia  Hemolytic transfusion reaction
  • 48. Bleeding due to Disseminated Intravascular Coagulopathy  Systemic activation of the coagulation system  deposition of fibrin clots and microvascular ischemia and may contribute to the development of multiorgan failure  Exhaustion of coagulation proteins and platelets may result in bleeding complications
  • 49. Bleeding due to Sepsis  Gram-negative sepsis may result in thrombocytopenia  Meningococcemia, Clostridium perfringens sepsis, and staphylococcal sepsis may result in defibrination and hemostatic failure
  • 51. Introduction  First widely accepted during the late 19th century  Widely used in world war I  Whole blood was the standard therapy until the 1970s when blood component therapy became available  Breakthroughs  Landsteiner (1900) – discovery of the ABO grouping  Levine and Stetson (1939) – discovery of the Rh grouping
  • 52. Replacement Therapy  Typing and Cross-matching  The basis of blood transfusion  In principle a person can only be transfused with the blood of the same ABO and Rh group  This is why cross-matching b/w the donor’s RBC and the recipient’s sera is necessary before transfusion  However in emergency situations blood type O- can be transfused to all patients and an Rh- person can be transfused with an Rh+ blood  Autologous transfusion • Up to 5 units (1st is at 40 days before and the last is at 3 days before the surgery) • The patient should have at least a Hgb of 11mg/dL and a Hct of 34
  • 53. Replacement Therapy Form Advantages Disadvantages Others Whole Blood -Once the gold standard -Rarely used today -Difficult to store -related to adverse inflammatory response and multiple organ failure - Shelf life = 42 days - Low RBC viabiltity RBCS - product of choice for most clinical situations requiring resuscitation - reduces reactions caused by plasma componens - Frozen RBCs are not yet available for emergencies - Improved RBC viability
  • 54. Replacement Therapy Form Advantage Disadvantage Others Leukocyte- Reduced and Leukocyte- Reduced/Washe d Red Blood Cells - prevents almost all febrile, nonhemolytic transfusion reactions, alloimmunization to HLA I antigens, and platelet transfusion refractoriness and CMV transmission - Predisposition to post-op bacterial infection and multiorgan failure (according to some studies) - Standard RBC product in most developed countries Fresh Frozen Plasma - usual source of the vitamin K - dependent factors and is the only source of factor V - Similar infectious risk as other forms - Better availability than other forms Platelet concentrates - Used in thrombocytopenia Similar infectious risk as other forms
  • 55. Indications for Blood Replacement and its Products  Improvement of O2 carrying Capacity  Anemia  In the past - Hgb <10mg/dL and Hct <30 preop  Today – Hgb <7-9mg/dL  Volume Replacement  Most common indication for blood transfusion in surgical patients  >20% blood loss in patients w/ normal lab values
  • 56. Concepts in resuscitation  OLD practice: Crystalloid RBC plasma platelet(1970)  NEW Concept: DAMAGE CONTROL RESUSCITATION  Aimed to halt and prevent rather than treating the TRIAD OF DEATH (Coagulopathy, Acidosis, Hypothermia)  RATIONALE:  Old: high incidence of truncal hemorrhage and deaths in Trauma which can potentially be prevented.  Received significant blood transfusion >4-6 units
  • 57. DAMAGE CONTROL RESUSCITATION  Crystalloids packed RBC Platelet/Plasma  Components:  Permissive hypotension (SBP= 60-80mmhg)  Minimized crystalloid based resuscitation  Blood products (RBC, Plasma, Platelet)  Ratio: 1:1:1(RBC, Plasma, Platelet) After liters of crystalloids
  • 60. Complications of Transfusion  Transmission of Infections  CMV, Syphilis, HBV, HCV, HIV, etc.

Editor's Notes

  1. A small artery with a lateral/longitudinal incision may remain open due to physical forces, whereas a similarly sized vessel that is completely transected may contract to the extent that bleeding ceases spontaneously. Bleeding in the thigh in an elderly versus an athlete, in which individual will bleeding most likely stop? Athlete because of bulkier muscle mass around the thigh adding pressure on the vessel wall that is high enough such that bleeding can be stopped by mere vasoconstriction
  2. Thrombopoieitin is produced from the liver and kidneys Anucleate fragments of megakaryocytes with an average life span of 7 to 10 days. Normal range: 150,000 and 400,000 THROMBOPOIETIN is a predominant mediator of platelet production Can be changed quantitatively and qualitatively Plays an integral role in hemostasis by forming a hemostatic plug and by contributing to thrombin formation For you to have good hemostasis, you need at least 50,000/µL Quantitative – relating to number or life span Qualitative – relating to function
  3. ADP – adenosine diphosphate – sugar backbone attached to a molecule of adenine and 2 phosphate groups bonded to the 5 carbon atoms of ribose; platelet agonist that causes platelet shape change Irreversibly inhibited by Asprin Reversibly blocked by NSAIDs Not affected by COX-2 inhibitors Primary Hemostasis: Mediated by ADP and serotonin Reversible and is not associated with secretion Heparin does not interfere in this process (can occur in a heparinized patient) Recruitment of platelets from circulating blood Mediated by a release reaction by the adhered platelets to seal the disrupted vessel
  4. B. Second Wave of Aggregation: Inhibited by aspirin and NSAIDs, cAMP Alterations in the phospholipids of the platelet membrane which allow calcium and clotting factors to bind to the platelet surface Discharge of ADP, Calcium, Serotonin, TXA2, and α-granule proteins Requires fibrinogen which links glycoprotein IIb / IIIa receptor on the activated platelets. Results in compaction of platelets into an amorphous plug and is irreversible. Examples of Antiplatelets Aspirin GP IIB/IIIA inhibitors - clopidogrel
  5. TF + VII = Tissue factor complex
  6. VIII+IX+X = Intrinsic factor complex Examples of Anticoagulants Heparin Warfarin Direct Thrombin Inhibitors Factor Xa Inhibitors 12/11/98
  7. Examples of fibrinolytic agents Streptokinase Urokinase Anistreplase Reteplase Alteplase Tenecteplase
  8. Plasminogen is activated by conversion of plasmin by either tissue type plasminogen or urinary type plasminogen. Then the plasmin cleaves fibrin at multiple site releasing fibrin degradation products
  9. Types 1 and 2 are both responsive to desmopressin acetate treatment.
  10. If you have NO Vitamin K, you could bleed during surgery Usually request PT, PTT and give necessary components to correct deficiency
  11. Drugs which can affect clotting mechanism: Aspirin, cephalosporins, calcium channel blockers (amlodipine)
  12. NOTE: Drugs which can affect clotting mechanism: Aspirin, cephalosporins, calcium channel blockers (amlodipine)
  13. Rh- comprises only 15% of the population Problems may arise when 4 or more units of O- are transfused  increased risk of hemolysis Autologous transfusion Up to 5 units (1st is at 40 days before and the last is at 3 days before the surgery) The patient should have at least a Hgb of 11mg/dL and a Hct of 34
  14. Damage control resuscitation Permissive hypotension, minimizing crystalloid based resuscitation, immediate release and administration of blood componanents w/ simial ratio as whole blood d/t coagulopathy of trauma esp in patients in shock Prevention of acidosis, hypothermia, and coagulopathy