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100

What occurs in vitro and in vivo when Lupus Anticoagulant is present?

In vitro: acts as an anticoagulant

Prolong phospholipid-dependent clot-based tests (PT and PTT) 

In vivo: Acts as a Procoagulant by:
Interferes with proteins that bind to Phospholipid

Blocks inhibitory proteins from binding, leading to thrombosis

Depends on protein blocked as to whether it disrupts anticoagulant or procoagulant reactions 

associated with increased risk for thrombosis and miscarriage 

100

What is the patient required to do before lab tests can be run for evaluation of thrombosis risk?

stop taking oral anticoagulants 10-14 days before testing 

100

What is the prevalence of thrombosis?

30% of all people are expected to die of thrombosis 
100

What is the incidence of arterial thrombosis?

500,000 premature deaths in US 

100

What are the major functions of the phospholipid in the coagulation cascade?

Required for most major steps in the coagulation  reactions 

Formation of multimolecular coagulation protein complexes on phospholipid cell surfaces 

200

What is included in step three for diagnosis of APS?

Phospholipid dependent studies(DRVVT confirm or STACLOT LA): shortened clotting times with addition of extra phospholipid, to prove that inhibitor LA is sensitive by being neutralized by the increased amount of phospholipid 

>1.2 seconds of DRVVT Screen/confirm =suspect LA but have to rule out VIII inhibitor 

200

Define Thrombosis.

Inappropriate formation of platelet or fibrin clots that obstruct the blood vessels

may cause ischemia leading to necrosis 

200

What are two examples of additional antiphospholipid antibodies? How do we test for them?

Anticardiolipin Ab and Anti Beta 2 glycoprotein 

Immunoassays 

200

When would you suspect a lupus anticoagulant?

When there is a prolonged PTT and the patient is not on oral anticoagulants and the fibrinogen is normal, and the initial mixing study is not corrected and the patient is not bleeding 

200

What are the clinical symptoms of venous thrombi?

Heat, localized pain, redness, and swelling

300

List some non-disease risk factors for thrombosis aka acquired factors. 

Age >50, immobilization, high fat diet, lipid metabolism imbalance, oral contraceptive, pregnancy, hormone therapy replacement, femoral or tibia fracture, hip knee gynecologic or prostate surgery, smoking, or chronic inflammation 

300

What are the antigen targets of antiphospholipid syndrome?

Protein C and S, ***Prothrombin***, XI, XII, and Kininogens 

300

What would cause you to suspect there is a congenital thrombosis issue? 

When it occurs in young adults

occurs in unusual sites

is recurrent

occurs in patient with a family history 

300

Define thrombophilia.

predisposition to thrombosis secondary to a congenital or acquired disorder 

theoretical causes include physical, chemical or biological events

300

What is step 2 in the diagnosis of APS?

Non-correction of the mixing study,

Non-correction of DRVVT mixing study

400

What is the first step in the diagnosis of APS (antiphospholipid syndrome)?

aka phospholipid-dependent test

Test 1: Prolonged aPTT with LA sensitive reagent

Test 2: Prolonged Dilute Russel Viper Venom test (DRVVT)

Must do both since they evaluate different pathways, BOTH REAGENTS ARE LOW-PHOSPHOLIPID [] 

400

What is Factor V Leiden? What are the tests for it? 

Factor V mutation, substitutes glutamine for arginine on factor V molecule, arginine is cleavage site for APC, mutation slows or prevents inactivation of factor V

Lab tests for APC resistance: PTT with factor V depleted plasma and patient plasma (make two tubes one with just cacl2 and the other with cacl2 and APC) APC resistance occurs when the CaCL2 APC tube has a reading of <54 seconds with 27 sec on the CaCl2 tube, OR Factor V leiden mutation assay (molecular testing) 

400
What is a Pulmonary Embolism?

DVT that has moved to the lungs, start as deep leg and calf vein emboli

entire leg can swell 

400

List some diseases that increase your risk for thrombosis.

Antiphospholipid syndrome, myeloproliferative neoplasms, Hepatic disease, cancer (adenocarcinoma), leukemia, parasoxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, and chronic inflammation 

400

What can arterial thrombi cause if it moves to the brain? 

dementia 

500

What is the incidence of venous thrombosis in the US? What are the types of thrombi? 

1 in 1000

Superficial leg veins, deep vein thrombosis DVT in iliac popliteal and femoral veins of upper legs and calves, large occlusive thrombi in veins of upper extremities, liver, spleen, intestines, brain or kidneys 

500
Explain the initiating mechanism of an arterial thrombosis.

Atherosclerotic plaque formation in vessel walls, activated platelets, monocytes, and macrophages embedded the plaque within the endothelial lining, Plaques rupture blocking arteries and releasing thrombotic mediators initiating thrombosis 

500

What are the arterial thrombosis predictors? 

Cholesterol (total cholesterol, High LDL and low HDL)

High sensitivity CRP(detects low levels of inflammation) 

Plasma homocysteine (result of folate trap) 

fibrinogen activity

Lipoprotein(a) in LDL 

500

What are some inherited congenital thrombosis disorders? 

AT(antithrombin) deficiency, PC (activated Protein C) deficiency, Free Protein S deficiency, APC resistance, Prothrombin G20210A, and Hyperfibrinogenemia 


500

Explain the principles of the LA sensitive aPTT and the DRVVT. 

PTT-LA: regular aPTT test with reagent sensitive to LA, Low dose phospholipid, prolonged if LA present

DRVVT: Russell viper venom activates factor X to initiate common pathway, minimal amount of phospholipid present (dilute), if LA present, it binds to phospholipid available prolonging dRVVT clotting time