Coagulation disorders: Pathology review

Last updated: November 01, 2022

Coagulation disorders: Pathology review

Patho

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Transcript

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At the hematology ward, there’s Braden, a 5 year old male, who developed prolonged bleeding after circumcision.

His mother is worried because he has a history of recurrent hemarthrosis after minor falls.

Family history reveals a relative of his mother who suffered from bleeding diathesis.

Now, there’s also a 3 day old preterm baby, called Harlow, who is bleeding severely from the umbilicus.

Her mother states that she did not get the standard care after delivery. CBC, PT and PTT are ordered for both patients.

They both have normal platelet count.

Now, Braden has normal PT but elevated PTT, while Harlow has both PT and PTT elevated.

Both Braden and Harlow are suffering from a hemostasis disorder.

Hemostasis disorders, also known as bleeding disorders, can be broadly divided into three groups.

The first includes problems with primary hemostasis, which is the formation of the platelet plug, so they are also called platelet disorders.

The second group includes problems with secondary hemostasis, which is making a strong fibrin clot through activation of the intrinsic, extrinsic and common coagulation pathways, and so they’re known as coagulation disorders.

And the last group includes disorders that affect both primary and secondary hemostasis and are known as mixed platelet and coagulation disorders.

Let’s focus on coagulation disorders that are usually due to a decrease in the number of clotting factors and causes include hemophilia and vitamin K deficiency.

So, let’s look at hemophilia first.

They are a group of inherited bleeding disorders caused by deficiencies in various coagulation factors.

Hemophilia A and B are X-linked recessive disorders so a high yield fact is that they almost exclusively affect males while females are carriers.

A big hint for hemophilia is a family history of a maternal relative with a bleeding disorder.

Hemophilia A causes a deficiency in factor VIII, while hemophilia B leads to a deficiency in factor IX.

Hemophilia C on the other hand is an autosomal recessive disorder, meaning it can affect both males and females, leading to a deficiency in factor XI.

Alright, onto another coagulation disorder, vitamin K deficiency.

Vitamin K acts as a cofactor to an enzyme found in the liver called gamma glutamyl carboxylase, which converts the non-functional forms of coagulation factors II, VII, IX, and X into their functional forms.

So without vitamin K, the loss of factor VII means that the extrinsic pathway won’t function; and without factor IX, the intrinsic pathway won’t function; and without factor X and II, the common pathway won’t function.

So, all pathways in the coagulation cascade are affected in vitamin K deficiency.

Normally, vitamin K comes from the diet, like in leafy dark green vegetables, like spinach, kale and chard, or can be made by intestinal microbial flora.

So, it’s easy to see that vitamin K deficiency can occur in malabsorption syndromes like cystic fibrosis and celiac disease, or with prolonged use of broad-spectrum antibiotics that kill intestinal microbial flora such as fluoroquinolones and cephalosporins.

Now, deficiency is rare in adults but neonates are particularly susceptible because breast milk is low in vitamin K and at the same time, their intestinal flora is still unable to produce it.

That’s why every newborn gets an intramuscular injection of vitamin K.

Whatever the cause, coagulation problems share some common symptoms and these are high yield!

People with these disorders can get large bruises after very minor trauma, and this is called easy bruising.

They also suffer from ecchymoses, which is discoloration caused by bleeding under the skin, deep tissue hematomas, hemarthrosis, which is bleeding inside the joint space, posterior epistaxis, which causes a severe nosebleed, GI bleeding, urinary bleeding, and persistent bleeding after surgical procedures.

Now, a dangerous complication is intracerebral hemorrhage, or bleeding into the brain, which can cause a stroke or increased intracranial pressure.

For hemophilia A, B and C, the symptoms are nearly clinically identical, which makes sense since factors VIIIa, IXa and XIa work together in the coagulation cascade to activate factor X.

The severity of the symptoms depends on the severity of the underlying mutation. Having 5 to 40% of normal factor activity is mild, 1 to 5% is moderate, and less than 1% is severe.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Kumar & Clark's Clinical Medicine" Saunders (2009)
  4. "Establishing the Prevalence and Prevalence at Birth of Hemophilia in Males" Annals of Internal Medicine (2019)
  5. "The Diagnosis and Management of Congenital Hemophilia" Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis (2012)
  6. "Haematology" Scion Pub Limited (2010)
  7. "Vitamin K-dependent carboxylase. Haematologia (Budap)" Vermeer C, De boer-van den berg MA. (1985)