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Normal Hemostasis

Hemostasis is the process that controls bleeding after an injury. It involves platelets, blood vessels, and coagulation proteins interacting to form a clot and seal the break in a blood vessel. The coagulation cascade is tightly regulated and involves an initiation phase, amplification phase, and propagation phase to generate a small amount of thrombin that then activates platelets and coagulation factors to produce a burst of thrombin. Fibrinolysis then breaks down the clot once healing is complete. Laboratory tests evaluate parts of this process but must be interpreted carefully as abnormalities may not always indicate a bleeding or clotting disorder.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views53 pages

Normal Hemostasis

Hemostasis is the process that controls bleeding after an injury. It involves platelets, blood vessels, and coagulation proteins interacting to form a clot and seal the break in a blood vessel. The coagulation cascade is tightly regulated and involves an initiation phase, amplification phase, and propagation phase to generate a small amount of thrombin that then activates platelets and coagulation factors to produce a burst of thrombin. Fibrinolysis then breaks down the clot once healing is complete. Laboratory tests evaluate parts of this process but must be interpreted carefully as abnormalities may not always indicate a bleeding or clotting disorder.

Uploaded by

Girum Tesfaye
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 53

Normal Hemostasis

By: Girum T.

1
Outline
 Hemostasis
definition
 Components of Hemostasis
 Vascular Intima
 Platelets
 Tissue factor bearing cells
 The coagulation system
 Coagulation regulatory Mechanisms
 Fibrinolysis
 Coagulation pathways
 Laboratory investigation

2
Overview of normal hemostasis
 A complex process that keeps blood fluid in the
circulation
 When an injury occurs, produces a clot to stop
the bleeding
 Keeps the clot confined to the site of injury
 Dissolves the clot as the wound heals
 When Hemostasis system is out of balance,
thrombosis(clotting) or Hemorrhage(bleeding)
can be life threatening.
3
Overview…
 Elements of Hemostasis
 Cellular elements
 The vascular intima
 Platelets
 Extra vascular Tissue factor (TF) bearing cells
 Plasma components
 Coagulation proteins
 Fibrinolytic proteins
 Coagulation inhibitors
 Fibrinolytic inhibitors
4
Vascular intima in Hemostasis
 Plays important role in Hemostasis
 The inner most lining monolayer is the
Endothelium
 It is smooth and unbroken surface that
promotes fluid passage
 Elastin and collagen surrounds the endothelium
 Sub-endothelial connective tissues are collagen
and fibroblasts as well as smooth muscle cells
in arteries
5
Vascular intima…

Fig 1Normal blood flow in intact vessels

6
Anticoagulant properties of intact
vascular intima
Composed of rhomboid cells presenting a smooth, contiguous
surface
Secretes the eicosanoid platelet inhibitor prostacyclin
Secretes vascular “relaxing” factor nitric oxide
Secretes the anticoagulant glycosaminoglycan heparan sulfate
Membrane ecto-ADPase
Secretes coagulation extrinsic pathway regulator tissue factor
pathway
inhibitor (TFPI)
Maintains cell membrane thrombomodulin, a protein C
coagulation control system activator

7
Procoagulant properties of vascular Intima

During damage
Vasoconstriction in arteries and arterioles
Exposed sub-endothelial collagen binds and activates
platelets
Endothelial cells secrete VWF
On activation, endothelial cells secrete adhesion
molecules
Subendothelial cells expresses tissue factor which
activates the coagulation system

8
Fig. 2 Anti and pro coagulant role of Ecs (Rodaks Hem. P:644)
9
Fibrinolytic properties of vascular
intima
 Secretion of tissue plasminogen activators
(TPA)
 Secretion of plasminogen activator
inhibitors 1 (PAI-1)
 Thrombin bound to thrombomodulin
activates thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis
inhibitor (TAFI)

10
Platelets
Are produced from the cytoplasm of bone marrow
megakaryoctes (How?)
Though 2 to 3 µm In diameter, they are complex
Adhere : roll and cling to non platelet surfaces
Aggregate: platelets adhere to each other
Secrete: platelets discharge
the contents of their granules
In-depth description of platelet structure and
function?

11
Tissue factor bearing cells

 TF is a transmembrane receptor found on


extravascular cells such as smooth muscles,
fibroblasts, neuroglia, epidermal cells.
 Monocyte and Endothelium also express TF
after activation
 TF can circulate in flowing blood on small
procoagulant particles (microparticles)

12
Coagulation system
Occurs when the enzyme thrombin is
generated and proteolyses soluble plasma
fibrinogen, forming the insoluble fibrin
polymer or clot
In a tightly regulated fashion
And removal of the clot

13
Nomenclature
 16 procoagulants (coagulation factors)
 8 are enzymes that circulate in an inactive
form(zymogens)
 Others are cofactors
 In 1958 named using roman numbers in the
order of their initial description or discovery

14
Or we can group as:
 GLA domains
 II, VII, IX, X, PC, PS, PZ
 Non-GLA domais
 XI, XII, XIII, PK, TAFI
 Cofactors
 V, VIII, PS, PZ, VWF, HMWK, TF, TM
 Structural proteins
 Fibrinogen
 Inhibitors
 AT, TFPI, PZ dependent protease Inhibitors

15
Secondary hemostasis(coagulation)

Fig. 3 The coagulation cascade (PG Hem.


P:748
16
Deficiencies of the coagulation cascade scheme
 Variation in clinical phenotype and deficiency
of components of the intrinsic pathway
 There are two independent pathways
 No recognition of the complex role of platelets
in clot formation
 Does not show that Thrombin formation
requires 3 consecutive phases namely:
Initiation,Amplification,Propagation

17
Secondary hemostasis(coagulation)

The cell based coagulation model:


Initiation
Amplification
Propagation
Stabilization

18
Secondary…
 Tissue factor initiates blood coagulation
 TF-FVIIa complex activates FX and FIX
 Traces of TF-FVIIa complex rapidily
inactivated by TFPI
 Fxa interacts with its cofactor Fva to form
prothrombinase comlex and generates small
amount of thrombin on TF surface.

19
Secondary…
 Duringamplification, Small amount of
thrombin generated from initiation phase is
responsible for:
 Activating platelets
 Activating FV
 Activating FVIII
 Dissociating factor FVIII from VWF
 Activating FXI

20
Secondary…
 Thrombin generation is propagated on the
platelet surface
 FV, FVIII, FIX and FXI will be localized to the
surface of platelets
 FXI is activated by priming amount of
thrombin bypassing the need for FXII
 FXIa activates FIX to FIXa
 Once platelet tenase complex is assembled, FX
is activated to support thrombin burst
21FXIII stabilizes the fibrin strands
Fig.4 The cell based coagulation model (Rodaks Hem.
22 Page: 656)
Physiological anticoagulants
 AT
 Heparin cofactor II
 TFPI
 PC-PS pathway

23
Fig. 5 Regulatory points (Rodaks Hem. Page: 657)
24
Tertiary hemostasis( fibrinolysis)
 The final effector is plasmin
 Plasmin is formed from plasminogen
 Plasmin is involved in breaking down fibrin into
soluble fragments (fibrinolysis)

25
Fibrinolysis…

 Inhibitors of fibrinolysis
 Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1
 α2- Antiplasmin

26
Fig. 6 Fibrinolysis and its modulation (PG hem, P. 752)
27
Laboratory investigation of bleeding and
coagulation disorders
 It is an attempt to mimic in vitro process that
normally occur in vivo
 May give misleading results
 Prolonged APTT in complete deficiency of
FXII
 Normal screening test do not necessarily imply
that the patient has entirely normal hemostasis
 It is a multistep process (first-line, Second-line)
 No single test for definitive diagnosis

28
Laboratory…

A practical algorithm to assist the diagnosis of


29 hemostasis disorders
Equipments
 Water bath
 Refrigerators and freezers
 Centrifuge
 Reagents and buffers
 Plastic and glass tubes
 Pipettes
 Automated coagulation analyzers

30
Pre analytical variables
 The quality of the test result is only as good as
the quality of the test sample
 Venous blood sample should be obtained
whenever possible
 Patients should be relaxed and in a warm
surroundings
 Light pressure using tourniquet (for <1 min)
 Not from indwelling line or catheter

31
Pre analytical variables
 Sample collection
 Anticoagulant - 3.2% sodium citrate
 Brand of the blood tube
 Blood to citrate ratio- 9:1
 Adjusting anticoagulant volume for hematocrit
(see Dacie and Lewis Page 391 or Rodack
Hemat. 5th ed. Page 764)
 Use plastic or siliconized glass collection tubes
 Venipuncture collection directly into evacuated
tubes containing anticoagulant is recommended
32
Pre analytical variables
 Transportation
 Separation of plasma from blood cells
immediately
 Safely capped in a vertical position
 Assurance of stable conditions of temperature
 Avoidance of excessive light exposure
 Deliverance to the reference laboratory as
soon as possible etc…

33
Pre analytical variables
 Centrifugation
 Preparation of PPP
 At 1500g for 15 minutes
 Within 2 hrs of collection
 Without disturbing the buffy coat
 To achieve Platelet count <10,000

34
Common technical errors
 Faulty collection of sample
 Under-filling or over-filling
 High or low hematocrit
 Unsuitable anticoagulant
 Sample collection through a line that is in
contact with heparin
 Delay in sample analysis

35
Analytical considerations
 Methods:
 Clot detection
 Optical
 Mechanical
 Turbidity
 Chromogenic
 Chemiluminescence
 Clot waveform analysis (CWA)

36
Calibration and quality control
 Internationalstandards
 Reference standards
 Normal pool (at least 20 donors)

 See page 393 of Dacie and Lewis

37
Post-analytical consideration
 Post-analytical sample treatment and storage
 Reflex testing
 Result interpretation

38
The CBC:

 For platelet count


 EDTA anticoagulated blood is obtained for
analysis in an automated particle counter
 Pseudo thrombocytopenia or EDTA-
induced thrombocytopenia should be
considered in asymptomatic patients
 Does not measure platelet function

39
The PT(prothrombin time) Assay:
 To screen deficiencies in the extrinsic and
common pathways of coagulation
 To monitor oral anticoagulant therapy
 Detect vitamin K deficiency due to liver
disease, malnutrition and warfarin therapy
 The PT is affected by decrease in level of
fibrinogen, prothrombin, FV, FVII or FX

40
The PT assay…
 Mixing the patient plasma with thromboplastin
 Thromboplastin is a commercial tissue factor/
phospholipid /calcium preparation
 Tissue factor binds FVII in the patient plasma to
initiate coagulation
 Clot formation is measured by mechanical or
photo-optical end points that detect fibrin
formation.
 Thromboplastin preparations varies in their
sensitivity resulting in different clotting time .
41
The international normalized ratio(INR)
 Developed to standardize PT values via the
mathematical transformation
ISI
 INR= PT
MNPT
Where, PT = prothrombin time, MNPT = mean
normal PT,
and ISI = International Sensitivity Index of the
thromboplastin

42
The PT assay…
 The typical reference range of PT is 10-15sec.
 Prolonged PT in:
 Deficiency of one or more coagulation
factors in the extrinsic pathway: i.e., factors
VII, X, V, and II or I
 Vit K deficiency
 Certain liver diseases
 Circulating anticoagulants
 Anticoagulant therapy (e.g. Coumarin)
 DIC (disseminated intravascular coagulation)

43
The PT assay…
 Shortened PT in:
 Poor quality venipuncture (activated sample)
 Chronic disseminated intravascular
coagulation (in vivo activation)
 Cold activation of the sample
 Administration of recombinant factor VIIa

44
The APTT Assay
 To screen deficiencies of the intrinsic pathway
 to detect the lupus anticoagulant
 to monitor heparin therapy
 patient plasma is pre-incubated with the APTT
reagent(phospholipid and a surface-activating
agent such as silica or kaolin)
 Calcium is then added to the pre-incubation
mixture

45
The APTT Assay…
 A typical PTT reference range is 25–36 sec.
 APTT prolonged in:
 Decreased levels of intrinsic pathway
components (factors VIII, IX, XI, XII, pre-
kallikrein, and high-molecular-weight
kininogen)
 Shortened APTT in:
 Poor-quality venipuncture (activated sample),
 Chronic disseminated intravascular
coagulation (in vivo activation),
46 Increased factor VIII levels
The Mixing Test
 To distinguish between deficiency and
inhibitor
 Mixing patient plasma with normal plasma in a
1:1 ratio
 Followed by repeat assay of the PT or APTT
immediately after mixing and repeated 1–2
hours later
 Corrected to normal at both intervals suggest
that the original abnormal result was due to
factor deficiency
 Fail to correct to normal at one or both
47
The Thrombin Time Assay
 Measures the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin
 Addition of purified thrombin to patient plasma
 The resulting clotting time is a function of
fibrinogen concentration and activity
 A screening test for the presence of heparin in
a plasma sample
 Quantitative deficiency of fibrinogen,
qualitative abnormality of fibrinogen
(dysfibrinogenemia) prolongs TT
 RR=<20 sec
48
Reptilase Time
 A modification of the thrombin time in which the
purified enzyme Reptilase is used to replace
thrombin
 Reptilase is isolated from the snake Bothrops
atrox
 Ancrod a similar enzyme from Agkistrodon
rhodostoma can also be used to replace thrombin
 The snake venoms are not inhibited by heparin
and will be normal in the presence of heparin
 But remains raised in the presence of raised FDP
or abnormal or reduced fibrinogen
49
Fibrinogen Assays
 Methods:
 The clause technique
 PT-derived method
 NR= 200-400mg/dL
 May be decreased in liver disease or due to
consumption of fibrinogen when there is
accelerated intravascular clotting

50
Fibrinogen Assays
 Clause technique
 Make dilution of calibration plasma in veronal buffer to give
a range of fibrinogen concentration
 0.2 ml of each dilution and 0.1ml of thrombin performed in
duplicae
 Plot the clotting time in seconds against the fibrinogen
concentration in g/l on log/log graph paper
 1 in 10 concentration considered to be 100%
 There should be straight line connection b/n 5 and 50 sec.
 Make 1 in 10 dilution of each patient’s sample an dclot o.2ml
of the dilution with 0.1ml of thrombin
 Read fibrinogen level directly from the graph

51
Fibrinogen Assays
PT-derived method
The fibrinogen concentration is proportional to the total
change in optical signal observed during the PT assay
Derived directly from the PT assay without additional
time or expense
FDPs generated by thrombolysis do not interfere with
these
assays
But, not recommended for routine use in the clinical
laboratory

52
Interpretation of first line tests
 http://www.practical-haemostasis.com/Data Interpretation

53

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