Coagulation Cascade
Pharmacokinetics
~Random~
MOA
Surgery Considerations
100

aPTT measures the activity of which pathway?

Intrinsic pathway

100

what routes can you administer heparin? 

IV or SQ

very poor GI absorption because it's highly charged 

100

What are the two components of "Dual Platelet Therapy"? 

Aspirin and a Thienopyridine (Clopidogrel, Prasugrel, Ticagrelor) 

100

How does Bivalrudin and Argatroban prevent clotting? 

Blocks the activity of thrombin 

100

How many days before surgery should a patient stop taking aspirin? 

7-10 days 

can restart 24 hours after adequate hemostasis is achieved 

200

Hemophilia B affects what factor? 

Factor 9

200

what is the best way to administer tPA? 

directly at the site of the clot

200
What is the antidote to Heparin? 

Protamine 

** Not to LMWH though**

200

How does Rivaroxaban (Xarelto) inhibit clotting? 

Direct Factor Xa inhibition

200

What type of anesthesia is especially risky with anticoagulated patients? 

regional anesthesia 

300

test to measure fibrinolysis

D-Dimer

300

How long does it take for warfarin to reach therapeutic levels? 

5 days

300

What type of testing monitors Argatroban efficacy? 

ACT and aPTT

300

What does Heparin affect, and what subsequent factors are inhibited? 

Antithrombin III

- factors 2, 9, 10

300

Your patient has been on systemic tPA for a clot but is now bleeding a lot. What would you give to help the bleeding? 

- cryo

- platelets

400

What factors are dependent on vitamin K ? 

2

7

9

10

400

What class of anticoagulants require dose adjustment in renal patients

LMWH, but also Dabigatran (Direct Thrombin inhibitor) 

400

How do Thienopyradines work? 

bind to P2Y receptors on platelet to block ADP binding 

- no activation or aggregation of platelets

400

How does tPA work? 

activates plasminogen to plasmin 

400

What is an immediate reversal for a patient undergoing emergent surgery who is actively taking warfarin

- prothrombin complex concentrates

- procoagulants

- FFP

- Vitamin K

500

What activates prothrombin to trombin? 

prothrombinase complex 

- 10a, 5a, phospholipid, and Ca (factor 4)

500

what patient conditions can modify the efficacy of warfarin? 

- increased age

- liver disease

- Drug/ETOH use

- green leafy vegetables 

500

What should the ACT value be before starting cardiopulmonary bypass? 

> 400

500
What does Warfarin act on, and what factors are subsequently affected by this? 

- inhibits Vitamin K Reductase

- Factors 2, 7, 9, 10 

500

What is the antidote for Glycoproetin IIb/IIIa antagonists? 


(ex Abciximab, Tirofiban, Eptifibatide)

dialysis

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