Factor Groups
Factors
Pathways
Lab Assays
Lab Assays
100

What factors are part of the Contact Group?

HMWK, PK, XI and XII

100

What is the name of Factor II? What is its name when it is activated?

II = Prothrombin, IIa = Thrombin

100

What factors are in the Common Pathway?

Factors I, II, V, and X

100

What does the anti-Xa assay monitor?

Low molecular weight Heparin and unfractionated Heparin

100

What lab assay will monitor the Intrinsic Pathway?

aPTT


200

What factors are part of the Prothrombin Group?

II, VII, IX, and X

200

What is the name of Factor IX?

Christmas factor

200

What factors are in the Intrinsic Pathway?

Factors HMWK, PK, VIII, IX, XI, and XII

200

Which assay has a shorter "normal range": 

PT or PTT?

PT

200

What lab assay will measure the Extrinsic Pathway?

PT

300

What factors are part of the Fibrinogen Group?

I, V, VIII, and XIII

300

What is the name of Factor X?

Stuart factor

300

What factors are in the Extrinsic Pathway?

VII, TF (III), Calcium Ions

300

What conditions can the D-Dimer assay help to diagnose?

DIC and DVT or PE

300

A prolonged PT can indicate a deficiency of what factors?

Factors VII, I, II, V, or X

(Factors in the Extrinsic and Common Pathway)

400

What factors are Vitamin K dependent?

The Prothrombin Group: II, VII, IX, and X

400

What is the name of Factor V?

Proaccelerin

400

How is the Intrinsic Pathway activated?

Contact activation with collagen and platelets

400

What type of specimen is used to perform MOST coagulation testing?

The plasma from a sodium citrate tube.

400

A prolonged aPTT can indicate a deficiency of what factors?

Factors VIII, IX, XI, XII, I, II, V, or X

(Factors in the Intrinsic and Common Pathway)

500

What factors are used up in clot formation?

The Fibrinogen Group: I, V, VIII, and XIII

500

Which factor produces the stabilized fibrin clot when it is activated?

Factor XIII (fibrin-stabilizing factor)

500

How is the Extrinsic Pathway activated?


Vessel injury

500

Why is an "INR" value given with a PT result?

The INR is a calculation that corrects for the variability in PT results caused by the variable sensitivities (ISI) of the reagents. It is used to standardize the difference in sensitivity of reagents.

500

Why would you perform a mixing study?

When you have a prolonged aPTT and need to distinguish between a coagulation factor deficiency and a factor inhibitor.

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