Anticoagulants: Warfarin

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Anticoagulants: Warfarin

Surgery

Surgery

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Anticoagulants: Heparin
Anticoagulants: Warfarin
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Anticoagulants: Warfarin

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A 42-year-old man is brought to the emergency department because of right arm and leg weakness. The symptoms began suddenly two hours ago while he was eating breakfast. He was treated for an upper respiratory tract infection two weeks ago with azithromycin. Past medical history is significant for atrial fibrillation, right hip osteoarthritis, and gastroesophageal reflux disease. Current medications include warfarin, acetaminophen, and omeprazole. The patient started taking St. John’s Wort a few weeks ago for his depressed mood. The patient goes for a brisk walk every morning. He does not use alcohol, tobacco, or illicit drugs. His temperature is 37.33°C (99.2°F), pulse is 120/minute and irregularly irregular, respirations are 17/min, and blood pressure is 130/70 mm Hg. Physical examination demonstrates right-sided hemiplegia and right lower facial paresis. INR is 0.9. CT-angiography shows an occlusive thrombus of the left middle cerebral artery. Which of the following factors is most likely responsible for the development of this patient’s clinical condition?  

External References

First Aid

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2023

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2021

Anticoagulant drugs p. 418

warfarin as p. 441

Bleeding

warfarin p. 441

Extrinsic pathway p. 204

warfarin and p. 441

Fresh frozen plasma p. 434

warfarin reversal p. 724

for warfarin toxicity p. 247

Heparin p. 440

warfarin vs p. 441

Hypercoagulability p. 690

warfarin adverse effect p. 441

Necrosis p. 205

warfarin p. 441

Prothrombin

warfarin effect on p. 441

Spontaneous abortion

warfarin p. 632

Stroke p. 525

warfarin for p. 441

Teratogens p. 632

warfarin as p. 441

Vitamin K

warfarin reversal p. 724

for warfarin toxicity p. 247, 441

Warfarin p. 441

adverse effects of p. 433

coagulation cascade p. 418

cytochrome P-444 and p. 251

for DVT p. 691

griseofulvin and p. 198

heparin vs p. 441

PT measurement p. 431

reversal of p. 724

teratogenicity p. 632

therapeutic index of p. 233

toxicity treatment p. 247, 434

vitamin K antagonist p. 69

Transcript

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Anticoagulant medications are used to prevent blood clots from forming. These medications work by interfering with the normal function of plasma proteins called coagulation factors, which take part in secondary hemostasis. But let’s focus specifically on the anticoagulant warfarin, which works by preventing the synthesis of coagulation factors II, VII, IX and X, and anticoagulation proteins C and S. Now, to understand the regulation of clot formation we first need to talk briefly about hemostasis-- in which hemo refers to the blood, and stasis means to halt or stop. Hemostasis is divided into two phases: primary and secondary hemostasis.

Primary hemostasis involves the formation of a platelet plug around the site of an injured blood vessel, and secondary hemostasis reinforces the platelet plug with the creation of a protein mesh called fibrin. To get to fibrin, a set of coagulation factors each of which or enzymes need to be activated. These enzymes are activated via a process called proteolysis- which is where a portion of the protein is clipped off. In total, there are twelve coagulation factors numbered factors I-XII, but there’s no factor VI. Most of these factors are produced by liver cells, and it turns out that producing coagulation factors II, VII, IX, and X requires an enzyme that uses vitamin K.

Now, when vitamin K is absorbed from the digestive tract and travels to the liver, it’s in its dietary form and it’s called vitamin K quinone. An enzyme, called quinone reductase, takes electrons from NADPH, and donates them to vitamin K quinone, converting it into the reduced form which is called vitamin K hydroquinone. Then, vitamin K hydroquinone acts as a cofactor by donating its electrons to an enzyme called gamma glutamyl carboxylase, which converts the non-functional forms of coagulation factors II, VII, IX, and X into their functional forms. Gamma glutamyl carboxylase adds a carboxyl group, which is a chemical group made up of one carbon, and two oxygens, onto the end of glutamic acid residues on the proteins.

After the carboxylation step, vitamin K is in an oxidized form, where it can accept electrons, and it’s called vitamin K epoxide. Vitamin K epoxide gets converted back into vitamin K quinone by another enzyme called vitamin K epoxide reductase, or VKOR, which donates electrons to vitamin K epoxide using a thiol group. In this fashion, a single molecule of vitamin K can be reused many times. As it turns out, the drug warfarin, which was first used as a rat poison, blocks the function of this enzyme which blocks vitamin K from getting recycled and as a result factors II, VII, IX, and X don’t get activated.

Now let's take a closer look at the coagulation cascade to see where these coagulation factors play their respective roles. The coagulation cascade begins via two pathways --the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways. The intrinsic pathway starts when circulating factor XII comes into contact with the surface of activated platelets or collagen. Activated factor XII, then activates factor XI, which activates factor IX which activates factor X. Factor X starts the common pathway where it activates factor II, which activates factor I that builds the fibrin mesh. When factor II gets activated it also activates 4 other factors: V, VIII, IX, and XIII. Factor V gets activated and acts as a cofactor for X, factor VIII acts as a cofactor for factor IX, and factor XIII helps factor I, or fibrin, form crosslinks.

In the extrinsic pathway, exposed tissue factors on the damaged blood vessel activates factor VII, which activates factor X and starts the common pathway. So without vitamin K, the loss of factor VII means that the extrinsic pathway won’t function; the same goes for factor IX; and without factor X and II, the common pathway won’t function. Warfarin is taken per-oral and it affects the extrinsic pathway first since factor VII has the shortest half life and it’s the first coagulation factor to run out. Next, levels of factor II, IX, and X also drop, causing inhibition of the intrinsic and common pathways. Since factor VII drops first, warfarin’s efficacy is monitored using a blood test called prothrombin time, or PT, which is a measure of how well the extrinsic and common pathways are functioning. To perform this test, blood is drawn and the plasma is separated out by centrifuge. The plasma contains all the coagulation factors minus tissue factor, which is normally found within the blood vessel walls.

Sources

  1. "Katzung & Trevor's Pharmacology Examination and Board Review,12th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  2. "Rang and Dale's Pharmacology" Elsevier (2019)
  3. "Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 13th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2017)
  4. "Overview of hemostasis" J.C. Aster, H. Bunn (Eds.), Pathophysiology of Blood Disorders, 2e. McGraw-Hill. (2016)
  5. "Nomograms" D. Nicoll, C. Mark Lu, S.J. McPhee (2017)
  6. "Ischemic Stroke: Risk Stratification, Warfarin Teatment and Outcome Measure" J Atr Fibrillation (2015)
  7. "Critical Issues and Recent Advances in Anticoagulant Therapy: A Review" Neurology India (2019)