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Laboratory Testing in Coagulation

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Whole blood is subjected to high shear and the closure time is measured ... The clot used in the clot retraction procedure should be kept at 37oC and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Laboratory Testing in Coagulation


1
MLAB 1227- CoagulationKeri Brophy-Martinez
  • Laboratory Testing in Coagulation

2
Lab Testing For Primary Hemostasis Disorders
  • Purpose
  • Evaluates platelet concentration and function
  • Tests
  • Bleeding time discussed in lab
  • PFA-100
  • Platelet aggregometry

3
PFA-100 Platelet Function Assay
  • In-vitro system that stimulates the in-vivo
    function of platelets in primary hemostasis
    adhesion, activation and aggregation
  • Aids in detection of platelet dysfunction
  • Whole blood is subjected to high shear and the
    closure time is measured

4
Platelet Aggregation Studies
  • Tests the platelets ability to respond and
    aggregate
  • In the presence of in-vitro platelet aggregating
    agents, normal platelets will aggregate producing
    characteristic patterns of aggregation. Refer to
    pg. 787 in text
  • Agents include epinephrin, collagen, ADP,
    ristocetin, arachidonic acid, and thrombin

5
Lab Testing For Secondary Hemostasis Disorders
  • Purpose
  • Evaluates coagulation factors
  • Detects inhibitors
  • Screening Tests
  • PT
  • APTT Discussed
    in lab
  • Fibrinogen
  • Thrombin Time
  • Qualitative
  • Measures conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin
  • Thrombin cleaves fibrinogen
  • Normal ref range lt20 SECONDS

6
Lab Testing For Secondary Hemostasis Disorders
  • If a screening test is prolonged, further testing
    must be performed to locate the specific cause of
    the abnormality
  • 2 Possible Sources
  • Factor Deficiency
  • Circulating Inhibitors

7
Factor Deficiency Evaluation
  • First step
  • PT and/or APTT must be prolonged
  • Patient history and symptoms must be considered
  • Second Step
  • Mixing Study
  • Will determine whether a factor deficiency is
    present or a circulating inhibitor

8
Mixing Study
  • Principle
  • Patient plasma is diluted with normal pooled
    plasma to demonstrate factor levels
  • The normal plasma provides the missing factor in
    the patient plasma
  • 50 activity is generally ample to produce a
    normal PT or APTT

9
Mixing Study
  • If the procedure corrects the prolonged PT or
    APTT, the defect is in the procoagulant family.
    In other words a FACTOR ISSUSE
  • If the procedure does NOT correct the PT or APTT,
    the defect is due to an INHIBITOR

10
Factor Assays
  • Determines type of factor deficiency and activity
  • Targets either
  • PT Factors VII, X,V and II
  • APTT Factors XII, XI,IX AND VIII

11
Factor Assays
  • Principle
  • Ability of the patients plasma to correct a
    prolonged PT or APTT of a known factor deficient
    plasma
  • Normal activity range is 50-150 or 50 factor
    activity

12
Factor Assays
  • How is it done?
  • Commercially prepared Factor deficient plasmas
    are used that contain 100 of all factors except
    the one in question. A series of these plasmas
    is usually used which contain various levels of
    the factor. For example 0, 10, 20, 30, 40,
    50, etc.
  • As a control to compare results to, normal plasma
    (containing 100 of all factors) is added to the
    commercially prepared factor deficient plasma in
    the same way.
  • The patient mixture results and the normal
    control mixture results are then compared to
    quantitate the factor level in the patient
    plasma.
  • A factor assay curve is the basis for plotting
    patient clotting times at various dilutions
  • Results of the patient are expressed as a percent
    of the normal plasma. A patient with a normal
    factor level should be 50-150 of the normal
    control plasma.

13
Russell's Viper Venom Test (Stypven Time)
  • This is a mixing study used to differentiate
    deficiencies of Factors VII and X
  • If the patient lacks Factor VII, Viper Venom
    treated plasma added to the patient's plasma will
    correct the PT
  • In Factor X deficiency, the PT is not corrected

14
Inhibitor Screens
  • When a PT or PTT is prolonged it must first be
    determined if the defect is due to a true factor
    deficiency or if it may be due to an abnormal
    circulating inhibitor (autoantibody to a factor).
    An inhibitor screen will rule out one or the
    other.

15
Inhibitor Screen Example
  • Based on the fact that if a specimen contains at
    least 50 of a normal level of factors, the PT or
    PTT will give a normal result.
  • Normal plasma (containing 100 of all factors and
    giving a normal PTT) is added in equal proportion
    to the unknown plasma (which has already given us
    an abnormal PTT result).
  • This 11 mixture we know contains at least 50 of
    all factors (because we added it) so we expect
    the PTT on this mixture to be normal.
  • If the PTT on the 11 mixture does result in a
    corrected PTT (the patient sample was abnormal
    before but is normal now that we added normal
    plasma to it), then this indicates a factor
    deficiency was present in the original patient
    sample. The problem is not an autoantibody.
  • If the PTT on the 11 mixture does not correct
    the PTT, (the PTT is still abnormal even after
    normal plasma was added), then this indicates
    there is an autoantibody present. This antibody
    is not only binding the patient's factors, but
    the factors in the normal plasma that was added
    to the mixture as well.

16
Lupus Inhibitor Screen
  • Lupus inhibitor should be suspected in a patient
    with markedly prolonged PT and PTT, but no
    clinical symptoms or bleeding problems.
  • The abnormal antibody does not react in vivo
    (except a mild thrombotic tendency) but does
    react in vitro by binding to the phospholipids in
    the reagents used for coag testing. Commercially
    prepared reagents are available that do not
    contain phospholipids and should be used to
    perform the PTT on these patients. PTT results
    will then be normal

17
Factor VIII Inhibitor
  • Quantitate by preparing various dilutions of
    patient plasma with normal pooled plasma with a
    known amount of factor VIII activity
  • If factor VIII inhibitor is present, it will
    inactivate factor VIII

18
Lab Testing of the Fibrinolytic System
  • FDP
  • D-Dimer Discussed in lab
  • Clot Lysis
  • Detects increased fibrinolytic activity
  • Increased fibrinolytic activity found in DIC,
    liver disease, surgery, malignancies and women on
    oral contraceptives
  • The clot used in the clot retraction procedure
    should be kept at 37oC and examined at the end of
    8, 24, 48 and 72 hours for clot lysis. Normally
    there is no clot lysis before 72 hours. If the
    clot that was initially formed becomes fluid in
    less than 72 hours, abnormal clot lysis is
    present. The time at which lysis was observed is
    reported as the clot lysis time. If no lysis
    occurred, the results are reported as no clot
    lysis after 48 or 72 hours. (NOTE The clot
    should remain intact at least 48 hours.)

19
Historical Tests
  • In other words, might see on Registry

20
Lee White Whole Blood Coagulation Time
  • Uses whole blood
  • Measures all stages of coagulation in the
    intrinsic system
  • Screening test
  • Principle
  • The time interval from the initiation of the
    coagulation to visible clot formation reflects
    the condition of the clotting mechanism
  • NOTE This test is outmoded and is no longer
    performed in laboratories.

21
Clot Retraction
  • Evaluates primary hemostasis
  • Measures platelet retraction function
  • Principle
  • A function of platelets is to reduce the size of
    the fibrin clot. When a normal clot forms from
    whole blood, the clot retracts at 50 of original
    volume, expelling serum
  • Thrombosthenin, released by the platelets, is
    responsible for clot retraction. In addition,
    the number of platelets present also affects the
    clot retraction
  • Clot retraction begins within 30 seconds after
    the blood has clotted. At the end of one (1)
    hour, there should be appreciable clot
    retraction, and almost complete retraction by the
    end of four (4) hours. Clot retraction should be
    complete within 24 hours. An abnormal clot
    retraction time is found in Glanzmann's
    thrombasthenia

22
Tourniquet Test
  • Aka Rumpele-Leede or Capillary Fragility
  • Principle
  • Measures the ability of small blood vessels to
    retain rbcs under conditions of stress or trauma
  • Platelet number and function also important
  • No longer performed

23
Activated Clotting Time ACT
  • Developed to monitor coagulation status and
    heparinization in immediate need situations. The
    ACT uses tubes containing a negatively charged
    particulate activator of coagulation, such as
    kaolin, celite. When whole blood is drawn into
    the tube, the contact system is activated and
    clotting occurs. This assay is very sensitive to
    heparin, but is also affected by platelets.

24
On the Horizon
25
Thrombelastography TEG
  • Non-invasive instrument designed to analyze a
    whole blood sample to assess a patients clinical
    hemostatic condition
  • Primarily used during surgical procedures
  • Principle
  • Monitors hemostasis in its entirety
  • Clot initiation through clot lysis
  • Net effect of all hemostatic components
    interacting together
  • Activated blood maximizes thrombin generation and
    platelet activation in vitro
  • Demonstrates hemostatic potential of a blood
    sample at a given point

26
TEG
Normal TEG
27
TEG
  • Advantages
  • Differentiates surgical from pathological
    bleeding
  • Reduces the use of unnecessary blood products
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