coagulation disorders and anesthesia-basic pathophysiology

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COAGULATION DISORDERS COAGULATION DISORDERS AND ANAESTHESIA AND ANAESTHESIA PRESENTERS: DR UNNIKRISHNAN P DR SUNEESH THILAK CO-ORDINATOR DR C MADHUSOODHANAN PILLAI MODERATORS: DR GEETHA N K DR ASHA K S

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enumerates the various disorders of coagulation, the approach, the physiology of coagulation and various disorders of coagulation

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Page 1: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

COAGULATION COAGULATION DISORDERS AND DISORDERS AND

ANAESTHESIAANAESTHESIAPRESENTERS:

DR UNNIKRISHNAN P DR SUNEESH THILAK

CO-ORDINATORDR C MADHUSOODHANAN

PILLAIMODERATORS:DR GEETHA N K

DR ASHA K S

Page 2: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

What is normal hemostasis?

• Clot at the spot….

• Not elsewhere…!

Page 3: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Components of hemostasis

Interactive

Page 4: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Components: vascular

Intact endothelium: Non-thrombogenic

(-)

(-)

Page 5: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Components: vascular

Endothelial damage:

(+)(+)

Stress hormonesTraumaSurgery

Plaque ruptureInflammation…

• Exposes collagen• Exposes TF

Page 6: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

The first event…..

• VASOSPASM

– neurogenic– humoral

– ……but can’t rely on it fully.

Page 7: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology
Page 8: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

So the well equipped guy comes PLATELETS• They have receptors• They provide a phospholipid surface…• They contain granules

Dense - serotonin , ADP , Ca++

Alpha - coagulation factors , vWF , PDGF

Page 9: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Components: platelets

AdhesionActivation

Aggregation

Secretion

Procoagulantactivity

Page 10: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Endothelial damage:Platelet plug formation

• Endothelial damage exposure to collagen:– Promotes platelet adherence and activation

– Activated platelets secrete ADP and TxA2

• ADP promotes platelet recruitment

• TxA2 promotes platelet aggregation

– Result: formation of platelet plug (white clot)

Page 11: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

No one can hide the insults from them……

• ADHESION – [vWF]ADHESION – [vWF]

• SECRETION-[TxA2,ADP]SECRETION-[TxA2,ADP]

• AGGREGATIONAGGREGATION

Leads to Leads to PRIMARY HEMOSTASISPRIMARY HEMOSTASIS

Page 12: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology
Page 13: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Leads to….

PRIMARY HEMOSTASIS

• Occurs within SECONDS

Page 14: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

The balancing act

• PG E2 • PG I2 • NO ……..

all these oppose TxA2 & ADP

Page 15: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

In need of…. FIBRIN

• The linking of platelets in the primary plug, by fibrin, converts it into a definitive clot. This requires the participation of the Coagulation

Cascade. This process is known as

SECONDARY HEMOSTASIS

Page 16: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Prompt………. But finely controlled

• Precursor Zymogens Active Enzyme

• Rapid response• Finely regulated

– Negative feedback loops– Decrease in substrate– Inhibitors– Quiescent endothelium

Page 17: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

For example…

PL

xii------>xii aCa

Page 18: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology
Page 19: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Components: coagulation pathways

Extrinsic (TF) Intrinsic Initiation Amplification

Pivotal point of coagulation

Page 20: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

• Thrombin generation: the pivotal point of the coagulation process

• Thrombin actions:– Activates FXI,

amplifying thrombin generation

– Converts fibrinogen to fibrin

– Activates FXIII– Activates platelets

• Result: RED CLOT

Thrombin generation to fibrin-platelet clot formation

Page 21: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Cascade vs. cell-based model

Cell-based model• Hemostasis represented as:

• Occurring on two cell surfaces • Tissue factor bearing cells• Platelets

• Three overlapping phases:• Initiation (TF bearing cells)• Amplification (platelets)• Propagation (platelets)

• The coagulation cascades are still important, but are cell-based

• The extrinsic pathway works on the surface of the tissue factor bearing cells

• The intrinsic pathway works on the surface of platelets

• Routine coagulation tests do not represent the cell-based model of hemostasis.

Tissue factorbearing cells

1. Initiation

Platelets

Activated platelets

2. Amplification

3. Propagation

IIa

IIa

Page 22: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Cellular components

• Platelets• Endothelium• Monocytes• Erythrocytes

Page 23: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Molecular components

• Coagulation factors and inhibitors

• Fibrinolytic factors and inhibitors

• Adhesive proteins• Calcium• Immunoglobulins• PL PG Cytokines

Page 24: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Current model of hemostasis

Page 25: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Normal Hemostasis

Hoffman et al. Hoffman et al. Blood Coagul FibrinolysisBlood Coagul Fibrinolysis 1998;9(suppl 1998;9(suppl

1):S611):S61..

XX IIII

IIIIXXIXIX

TF-Bearing CellTF-Bearing Cell

Activated PlateletActivated Platelet

PlateletPlateletTFTF

VIIIaVIIIa VaVa

VIIIaVIIIa VaVa

VaVa

VIIaVIIa

TFTF VIIaVIIa XaXa IIaIIa

IXIXVV VaVa

IIII

VIIIVIII/vWF/vWF

VIIIaVIIIa

IXaIXa XX

IXaIXa

IXaIXaVIIaVIIaXaXa

IIaIIa

IIaIIa

XaXa

Page 26: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

• XIIXIIa VIIIaVIII• XIXIa VIIa-TFVII-TF• IXa IX V• X• Xa• PT Thrombin XIIIXIIIa

• FibrinogenFibrin• Stable

Fn

Page 27: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Endothelial damage:Initiation of thrombin generation

Endothelial damage

Exposure to tissue factor

Initiation of extrinsic pathway

Initiate thrombin generation

Activate FXI(intrinsic pathway)

Amplify thrombin generation

Page 28: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Soldiers…..I FIBRINOGENII PROTHROMBINIII THROMBOPLASTIN/TISSUE FACTORIV CALCIUMV PROACCELERIN/LABILE FACTORVII PROCONVERTIN/STABLE FACTORVIII ANTIHAEMOPHILIC FACTOR AIX ANTIHAEMOPHILIC FACTOR BX STUARTPROWER FACTORXI ANTIHAEMOPHILIC FACTOR C / PTAXII HAEGEMAN FACTOR / GLASS FACTORXIII FIBRIN STABILIZING FACTOR PREKALLIKREIN / FLETCHER FACTOR KALLIEKREIN PLATELET PHOSPHOLIPID

…They work in concert to form a beautiful definitive clot!

Page 29: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology
Page 30: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Clot:The end product of hemostasis

Page 31: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

The rebels….

• ANTICLOTTING MECHANISMS

1 LIMITING COAGULATION CASCADE

2 FIBRINOLYTIC SYSTEM

Page 32: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Antithrombin iii

• II• VII• IX• X• XI• XII

Page 33: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Protein C & Protein S

• VIIIa

• Va

Page 34: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

TFPW-inhibitor

• Inhibits F VII-TF complex

Page 35: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Two more…

Protein C & Protein S• VIIIa• Va

TFPW- inhibitor• Inhibits F VII-TF

complex

Page 36: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Fibrinolysis

• Plasmin is the key component

Page 37: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology
Page 38: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Serine Proteases

• XII• XI• X• II• VII

Page 39: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Cofactors

• VIII• V• III

Transglutaminase XIII

Page 40: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

VITAMIN-K dependent Factors

• Gamma carboxylation of these factors, after translation require Vit -k

Page 41: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Question hour in AAC

INFANCYSURGERIESFAMILY HISTORYDRUGS HORMONAL REPLACEMENT / OCPHISTORY OF BLEEDING IN THE PAST

Page 42: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

What to look for…?

PLATELET DISORDERS• Superficial• Comes immediately• Local measures

effective• Petechiae, ecchymosis

COAGULATION DEFECTS

• Deep s/c Muscle Joints Retroperitoneal

Delayed Unaffected by local

measures haematomas

Page 43: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Surgery induces an increase in..• TISSUE FACTOR• PLASMINOGEN ACTIVATOR INHIBITOR• vWF ..hyper coagulable hypofibrinolytic state

Page 44: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

These factors arise concern about the hemostasis• Surgery• Immobility• Infection• Ca• Hypothermia• Acidosis• Volume expanders• Extracorporeal circulation

Page 45: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

MONITORING HEMOSTASISLab tests

Page 46: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Feel.. There is no plan to stop• Ohhh ..

Page 47: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Monitoring hemostasisCascade vs. cell-based model

Cell-based model• Whole blood tests that

measure the interaction of platelets, coagulation factors, and other cellular or plasma factors present during clot formation are required to examine hemostasis in the cell-based model.

• The TEG is one such test.

Cascade model• Common coagulation tests

(PT, aPTT, platelet counts) do not reflect the roles of cells or contributions of local vascular and tissue conditions Plasma-based assays

miss the impact of platelets and platelet activation on thrombin generation.

Plasma-based assays use static endpoints (e.g. fibrin formation) - miss impact of altered thrombin generation on platelet function and clot structure.

Page 48: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

BLEEDING TIME

• Platelet function• 2-9.5 minutes• Limitations• Technique very important• Interferances• Skin Vs other sites

Page 49: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Platelet count

• 1.5 – 4.5 Lakhs/uL• The grading of risk• Idiot EDTA• Coulter principle

Page 50: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Prothrombin Time

• 11.1-13.1 sec• Extrinsic• Recipe: plasma , Calcium and

ThromboPlastin reagent

Page 51: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Prothrombin Time

Intrinsic Pathway

Extrinsic Pathway

Common Pathway

CLOT

PT

Page 52: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

What is INR?

• The aim is standardization of PT values

• ISI expresses the sensitivity of the PT reagent of a particular lab to that of WHO reagent.

• Patient PT / mean normal PT• [PT ratio]^ISI

Page 53: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Prolonged??? Think of….

• V VII X deficiency• Coumarin• Vit k def• Liver• DIC• Heparin?• II/PT def• hypofibrinogenemia

Page 54: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

aPTT

• 22.1 – 35.1 sec• Intrinsic• V,VIII,IX,X,XI and XII• ?- Heparin

– Warfarin also– Liver disease– DIC

Page 55: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time

Intrinsic Pathway

Extrinsic Pathway

Common Pathway

CLOT

APTT

Page 56: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Thrombin Time

• Late…• Circulating heparin levels HypofibrinogenemiaIncreased FDP16 – 24 sec

Page 57: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Thrombin Time

Intrinsic Pathway

Extrinsic Pathway

Common Pathway

CLOTTT

Page 58: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

CLOTTABLE FIBRINOGEN CONCENTRATION

• 150-400MG/dL• Modification of TT

Page 59: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Activated clotting time

70 – 180 secsVascular surgeriesC-P bypass HDCardiac catheterisation

Prolonged??

Page 60: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Activated Clotting Time

Intrinsic Pathway

Extrinsic Pathway

Common Pathway

CLOT

ACT

Page 61: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Thromboelastography

Viscoelastic propertiesBlood product transfusion according to need.

Page 62: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

The TEG® System

CELITE activated 0.36ml bloodCuvettePiston 4.5*Cuvette oscillates , piston freeCuvette Clot Piston Plot of pistonStronger clot THICK TEGWeaker clot NARROW TEG

Page 63: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

.

Page 64: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology
Page 65: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

.

Page 66: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

..

Page 67: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

PLOT

• R = 6-8 mins• K =10-12 mins• Alpha angle =

>50*• MA = 50-70 mm• A60

• F = >300 mins

Page 68: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Application of TEG analysis

.

Page 69: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

TEG analysis and clinical outcomes

• Detects hemorrhagic and prothrombotic states

• Reduces blood product usage, re-operations, hospital stays

• Provides guidance for proper therapy • Monitors level of platelet

inhibition• Provides guidance for

personalized drug therapies

Improves clinical outcomes

Lowers costs

Page 70: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

????

The TEG can distinguish between surgical

bleeding and bleeding due to a coagulopathy. True or False?

Next

Page 71: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Platelet function analyzers

• PFA-100PFA-100• MEDTRONIC HEMOSTATUSMEDTRONIC HEMOSTATUS

Page 72: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Still not over…?$#

• Hmmm…

Page 73: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

DISORDERS OF COAGULATION

INHERITED DISORDERS

Page 74: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

DISEASE OF KINGS….

Page 75: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

What is Hemophilia?

• Hemophilia is an inherited bleeding disorder in which there is a deficiency or lack of factor VIII (hemophilia A) or factor IX (hemophilia B)

Page 76: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Degrees of Severity of Hemophilia

• Normal factor VIII or IX level = 50-150%

• Mild hemophilia– factor VIII or IX level = 6-50%

• Moderate hemophilia– factor VIII or IX level = 1-5%

• Severe hemophilia– factor VIII or IX level = <1%

Page 77: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

CLINICAL FEATURES

Page 78: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Types of Bleeds

• Joint bleeding - hemarthrosis

• Muscle hemorrhage

• Soft tissue

• Life threatening-bleeding

• Other

Page 79: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Life-Threatening Bleeding

• Head / Intracranial– Nausea, vomiting, headache, drowsiness,

confusion, visual changes, loss of consciousness

• Neck and Throat– Pain, swelling, difficulty breathing/swallowing

• Abdominal / GI– Pain, tenderness, swelling, blood in the stools

• Iliopsoas Muscle– Back pain, abdominal pain, thigh

tingling/numbness, decreased hip range of motion

Page 80: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Characteristics

Page 81: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Age of presentation….

Page 82: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Do we bother about carriers?

Page 83: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Investigations…

• Prolonged PTT with normal Platelet count, BT and PT supports the diagnosis

• F VIII assay confirms the diagnosis and allows differentiation from…..?

Page 84: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Our weapons….

Page 85: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 • T ½ : 8-12h• VIALS: 250-2000 units• Each unit of FVIII/Kg infused:2% increase• “levels should be restored to 40% of

normal before surgery.. So initial dose..• Wt in Kg X desired level X 0.5• E.g. 50 kg x 40% x 0.5 = 1000 U• 3 ml/min adults, 100 u/min child

Page 86: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Infusion rate

Page 87: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

In another way…

Page 88: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Perioperative needs..

Page 89: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Recommendations

SOFT TISUE BLEED- 15 TO 20 %

HEMARTHROSIS/RETROPERITONEAL-25-50% x72h

MAJOR Sx/ LIFE THREATENING BLEED- 50% x2 wk

Page 90: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

B4 Sx …..

Page 91: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

INHIBITORS

Page 92: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Prophylaxis

Page 93: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Specialty posting!

Page 94: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

These should be kept in mind..

Page 95: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Iron deficiency anemia ????

• The money drains in to the hands of bank officials itself…!

• ….and what about prophylaxis?

Page 96: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Precautions

Page 97: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Cryoprecipitate / FFP

Page 98: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Desmopressin

Page 99: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

TA & EACA

Page 100: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Anesthetic Implications

• Oral premedication, no im• Vascular access… does not• Extremities, pressure points ,joints• Bleeding -oropharynx-ETT manipulation• No nasal intubation• Anticipate liver dysfunction• Neuraxial if….• Topical pressure• AIDS

Page 101: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

SURGERY/ MINOR PROCEDURE

Page 102: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Good news….

Page 103: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Hemophilia B

FACTOR IX DEFICIENCYMIMICS HEMOPHILIA-A CLINICALLYHENCE LAB DIAGNOSIS IS CRITICAL

FFP PLASMA FRACTION^PROTHROMBIN

COMPLEXThrombosis and embolism

Page 104: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

=….HEMOPHILIA B

Prolonged aPTT F IX + normal F VIII

Page 105: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Rx

Page 106: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

F IX/FFP/others

Page 107: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

PROTHROMBIN COMPLEX

Page 108: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Any factor concentrate for exhausted audience..???

Page 109: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Who am I ?

• Which is the most common inherited bleeding disorder?

• Bleeding only after surgery and minor trauma only….

• BT prolonged + reduced plasma F VIII activity

Page 110: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

vWD

1/100-50010mg/LAUTOSOMAL DOMINANTAffect PLATELET adhesion

Page 111: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Missing you… vWF

Page 112: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Lab report..

Page 113: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Treatment

F VIII CONCENTRATE / CRYO PPTBD x 2-3 days

OCP for….DESMOPRESSIN

Especially type ITest for responseTachyphylaxis if>48 hrs so monitorWorsen type IIa

Page 114: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

And….

Page 115: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

A FEW STRANGERS

Page 116: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

….

Page 117: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Hereditary Haemorrhagic Telengiectasia • Telengiectasia + A-V-F + Aneurysm-

CVS• Paradoxical air embolism• Arterial hypoxemia• Epistaxis• ANAESTHESIA Rx

Bleed oropharynx,trachea,oesophagus? Epidural ?

Page 118: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Hereditary thrombocytopenia

Page 119: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Can our routine tests detect a fibrinolytic defect?• Bleeding tendency+++• But all tests normal• E.g. Alpha 2 antiplasmin deficiency• Rx - EACA

Page 120: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

HYPERCOAGULABLE STATES

• PRO-PROCOAGULANT state!!• Focal• Don’t predispose to arterial

thrombus

Page 121: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

What’s it?

• Useless Heparin!!! Govt supply??• Very energetic F II & F V!• DIC ,Liver disease, heparin Rx• OCPs ? Hmm.. No.• Rx :AT III [A/C] Oral Anti coagulants

[C/C]

Page 122: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Protein C Deficiency

• F V , F VIII• Acquired def seen in…• Life threatening complications• Be suspicious..• Regional Vs GA , oral anticoagulants

Page 123: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome

Page 124: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

Strategy ??

• Anesthesia ?• Thrombosis- prophylaxis• Cardiac Sx

Page 125: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

THANK YOU

Page 126: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

No thanks …………..?%#

Page 127: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

References

Anesthesia and Coexisting disease 4th e , STOELTING

MILLER’S ANAESTHESIA ,6th eHARRISONS Principles of Internal

Medicine,16th eA Practice of Anesthesia ,Wylie and

Churchill DavidsonClinical Anesthesiology, G Edward MorganPathologic Basis of Disease, Kumar, Kotran

and RobbinsReview of Medical Physiology,GANONG,22nd e

Page 128: Coagulation Disorders and Anesthesia-Basic pathophysiology

• World Federation of Hemophilia Guidelines

• AnesthesiaUK.org• bja.oxfordjournals.org• National hemophilia foundation,

Educational Tools• The Internet Journal of

Anesthesiology