Coagulopathies
Appearance
Platelet disorders
[edit | edit source]- Decreased marrow production
- Excess destruction
- Poorly-functioning platelets
Coagulation disorders
[edit | edit source]Haemophilia A
[edit | edit source]- Factor VIII deficiency
- X-linked recessive
- Coagulopathy-type bleeding - haemarthrosis, bleed into muscle
- Prolonged APTT and decreased VIII assay
- Desmopressin IV raises factor VIII levels and may be sufficient for moderate bleeding
- Major bleeds require recombinant factor VIII
Haemophilia B (Christmas disease)
[edit | edit source]- Factor IX deficiency
- X-linked recessive
- Behaves clinically like Haemophilia A
- Treat with recombinant factor IX
Acquired haemophilia
[edit | edit source]- Suddenly-appearing autoantibodies that interfere with factor VIII
Liver disease
[edit | edit source]- Decreased synthesis of clotting factors, decreased absorption of vitamin K, abnormalities of platelet function
Malabsorption
[edit | edit source]- Less uptake of vitamin K, which is needed for factors 2, 7, 9 and 10
- Treat with IV vitamin K, or human prothrombin complex/FFP acutely
Trauma-induced coagulopathy
[edit | edit source]- Diagnosis
- Trauma patients should ideally have TEG on admission
- Thromboelastography (TEG)
- Measures the physical properties of the clot in whole blood via a pin suspended in a cup, as the elasticity and strength of the clot changes
- Allows for real-time interpretation of clot dynamics as the clot develops and is subsequently broken down
- R-time (reaction time) is the time to clot initiation, dependent on clotting factors (normally 4-8 minutes)
- K-time (kinetics) is the time needed to reach 20mm clot strength (normally 1-2 mins with rTEG and 1-3 mins with standard TEG - dependent on fibrinogen
- Alpha = slope of the angle between R and K - dependent on fibrinogen, how fast does the clot build up
- TNA = time to maximum amplitude
- MA = maximum amplitude = the ultimate strength of the clot - dependent on platelets and fibrin
- Rotational Thromboelastometry
- Similar information to TEG but different mechanism (pin rotates instead of cup rotating)
- Not really clear which is better yet, but there is much more literature for TEG than ROTEM
- Treatment
- Based on coag profile
- INR >1.2 or aPTT >30 seconds needs resus with plasma
- Platelets <100,000 for diffuse bleeding or <50,000 for microvascular bleeding were indications for platelets
- Hypofibrinogenaemia <229 mg/dL is an indication for cryoprecipitate (each unit of cryo should raise fibrinogen by 10mg/dL)
- Based on coag profile