Cristy M. Thomas FNP-BC University of Nevada School of Medicine University Medical Center, Las Vegas NV Nevada’s Only Level 1 Adult Trauma, Level 2 Pediatric.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1. What is the sequence of the intrinsic pathway of coagulation?
Advertisements

Hemostasis, BLOOD PRODUCTS & TRANSFUSION
BY : DR.SHAINA KALRA MODERATOR : DR.VIJAY KUMAR
Hemorrhagic diseases. Lesions of the blood vessels Lesions of the blood vessels Abnormal platelets Abnormal platelets Abnormalities in the coagulation.
BLEEDING DISORDERS AN OVERVIEW WITH EMPHASIS ON EMERGENCIES.
Brad Beckham T4. Definitions  Major blood loss Hemoglobin concentration below 6-10 g/dl  Massive transfusion in adults >9 erythrocyte units within 24h.
Massive transfusion: New Protocol
Blood Components Dosage And Their Administration
Faculty of Allied Medical Science
A/Prof Larry McNicol. Improves the patient’s own blood and avoids unnecessary transfusions. ‘THE THREE PILLARS’ Minimise blood loss Optimise blood volume.
INDICATIONS FOR EMERGENT TRANSFUSIONS Manjushree Matadial DO Saint Joseph Hospital and Medical Center, April 27,2009.
Initiation substances activate s by proteolysis a cascade of circulating precursor proteins which leads to the generation of thrombin which in turn converts.
Indications for Platelet Transfusion Laura Cooling MD, MS Associate Medical Director Transfusion Medicine.
BLOOD BANKING 1- BLOOD PRODUCTS 2- AUTOLOGOUS TRANSFUSION M. H. Shaheen Maadi Armed Forces Hospital.
Blood Components.
Bachelor of Chinese Medicine, The University of Hong Kong Bleeding disorders Dr. Edmond S. K. Ma Division of Haematology Department of Pathology The University.
Management of the Bleeding Patient
Transfusion Trends In Surgical Patients
HAEMATOLOGY MODULE: COAGULATION DISORDERS 1 Adult Medical-Surgical Nursing.
Transfusing tiny soldiers Ramsey C. Tate, MD. Applying combat-derived massive transfusion protocols to pediatric trauma patients.
MTP Octaplex rFVIIa Calgary. Massive Transfusion Protocol.
4th year medical students Blood Component Therapy Salwa I Hindawi MSc FRCPath CTM Director of Blood Transfusion Services KAUH. Jeddah.
Senior clinician Request: a o 4 units RBC o 2 units FFP Consider: a o 1 adult therapeutic dose platelets o tranexamic acid in trauma patients Include:
Hemostasis and Blood Coagulation
Transfusion of Blood Product History: 1920:Sodium citrate anticoagulant(10 days storage) 1958: Plastic bag of transfusion 1656: Initial theory and.
Care of the Anti-coagulated Trauma Patient Julie Mayglothling, MD, FACEP Emergencies in Medicine March 8 th, 2012.
Bleeding Disorders Morey A. Blinder, M.D.
Approach to Bleeding Disorders
Hemostasis, BLOOD PRODUCTS & TRANSFUSION M K Alam MS;FRCS Professor of Surgery.
DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation DIC is characterized by widespread coagulation and bleeding in the vascular compartment. DIC begins with massive.
Blood Component Therapy
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation. XIIa Coagulation cascade IIa Intrinsic system (surface contact ) XII XI XIa Tissue factor IX IXa VIIa VII VIIIVIIIa.
BLEEDING DISORDERS LCDR ART GEORGE.
Role of Factor Concentrates in Perioperative Coagulopathies Dr Neville Gibbs Department of Anaesthesia Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital.
The Clotting Cascade and DIC Karim Rafaat, MD. Coagulation Coagulation is a host defense system that maintains the integrity of the high pressure closed.
Investigation of Haemostasis MS. c. program Lab-9.
Bleeding and Kristine Krafts, M.D. Thrombotic Disorders.
Hematology Blueprint PANCE Blueprint. Coagulation Disorders.
BLEEDING & CLOTTING DISORDERS
Good Morning 6 June Uremic Bleeding: Pathogenesis and Therapy 麻醉科 林子富.
Preparation of blood components
HEMOSTASIS When blood vessels are cut or damaged, the loss of blood from the system must be stopped before shock and possible death occur. This is accomplished.
DIC. acute, subacute or chronic widespread intravascular fibrin formation in response to excessive blood protease activity that overcomes the natural.
Patient Blood Management Guidelines: Module 6 Neonatal and Paediatrics Roles Senior clinician Coordinate team and allocate roles Determine volume and type.
Coagulopathy in Trauma Seunghwan Kim, M.D. Dept. of Emergency Medicine College of Medicine, Yonsei University.
1. Normal haemostasis Haemostasis is the process whereby haemorrhage following vascular injury is arrested. It depends on closely linked interaction.
Hemostasis Is a complex process which causes the bleeding process to stop. It refers to the process of keeping blood within a damaged blood vessel. Dependent.
Approach to the Bleeding Child. Evaluation  History Current Bleeding Medical Family  Physical exam  Selected laboratory investigations.
Coagulation tests CBC- complete blood count
Abnormal bleeding in children J Kiwanuka. GENERAL INTRODUCTION.
ICU Management of the bleeding surgical patient
Plasma and plasma components in the management of disseminated intravascular coagulation Marcel Levi* Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam,
Chapter 23. Bleeding disorders associated with coagulopathy
Platelets. Fig Hemostasis the process by which the bleeding is stopped from broken vessels. steps involved: Vascular spasm. Platelets plug formation.
Obada Al-Eisa Saud Bashtawy Emad Mansour.  It is an acquired condition characterized by massive activation of the coagulation system.  It is always.
Use of Blood Components In Transfusion Therapy
Approach To Bleeding Disorders In Neonates
BLEEDING DISORDERS.
Multiple choice questions
K A U H Blood bank Wesaam Al-Sheyyab.
BLOOD & BLOOD PRODUCTS.
Transfusion Medicine: Types, Indications and Complications
General Approach of Haemostasis
Warfarin Toxicity Treatment & Management
General Approach in Investigation of Hemostasis
Coagulation Cascade of the Newborn
Coagulation Disorders Importance in surgical practice
Anticoagulant Reversal
Blood Components Dosage And Their Administration
Presentation transcript:

Cristy M. Thomas FNP-BC University of Nevada School of Medicine University Medical Center, Las Vegas NV Nevada’s Only Level 1 Adult Trauma, Level 2 Pediatric Trauma centers

 percent of trauma deaths are secondary to exsanguination  Causes of Coagulopathy in Trauma  Bleeding  Fluid Resuscitation  Transfusions-PRBC  Hypothermia  Multiple injuries

 Hypothermia  Acidosis  Progressive Coagulopathy

 Multifactoral  Dilution  Consumption of Platelets  Coagulation factor dysfunction of coagulation system

 Partial thromboplastin time (PTT)  Intrinsic Pathway  Prothrombin time (PT)  Extrinsic Pathway  Thrombin time  Common Pathway

 Fresh frozen plasma  Cryoprecipitate  Epsilon-amino-caproic acid (Amicar)  DDAVP  Recombinant human factor VIIa (Novoseven)

Source Platelet concentrate (Random donor) Each donor unit should increase platelet count ~10,000 /µl Pheresis platelets (Single donor) Storage Up to 5 days at room temperature “Platelet trigger” Bone marrow suppressed patient (>10-20,000/µl) Bleeding/surgical patient (>50,000/µl)

Transfusion reactions Higher incidence than in RBC transfusions Related to length of storage/leukocytes/RBC mismatch Bacterial contamination Platelet transfusion refractoriness Alloimmune destruction of platelets (HLA antigens) Non-immune refractoriness Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia Coagulopathy Splenic sequestration Fever and infection Medications (Amphotericin, vancomycin, ATG, Interferons)

Content - plasma (decreased factor V and VIII) Indications Multiple coagulation deficiencies (liver disease, trauma) DIC Warfarin reversal Coagulation deficiency (factor XI or VII) Dose (225 ml/unit) ml/kg Note Viral screened product ABO compatible

Prepared from FFP Content Factor VIII, von Willebrand factor, fibrinogen Indications Fibrinogen deficiency Uremia von Willebrand disease Dose (1 unit = 1 bag) 1-2 units/10 kg body weight

Mechanism Prevent activation plaminogen -> plasmin Dose 50mg/kg po or IV q 4 hr Uses Primary menorrhagia Oral bleeding Bleeding in patients with thrombocytopenia Blood loss during cardiac surgery Side effects GI toxicity Thrombi formation

Mechanism Increased release of VWF from endothelium Dose 0.3µg/kg IV q12 hrs 150mg intranasal q12hrs Uses Most patients with von Willebrand disease Mild hemophilia A Side effects Facial flushing and headache Water retention and hyponatremia

Mechanism Activates coagulation system through extrinsic pathway Approved Use Factor VIII inhibitors in hemophiliacs Dose: (1.2 mg/vial) 90 µg/kg q 2 hr “Adjust as clinically indicated” Cost (70 kg $1/µg ~$5,000/dose or $60,000/day

Surgery or trauma with profuse bleeding Consider in patients with excessive bleeding without apparent surgical source and no response to other components Dose: ug/kg for 1-2 doses Risk of thrombotic complications not well defined Anticoagulation therapy with bleeding 20ug/kg with FFP if life or limb at risk; repeat if needed for bleeding

 Journal of Emergency Medicine 2009 April  Transfusion of Blood Products in Trauma: An Update  Massive Transfusion should be 1:1 Ratio  Restrictive Transfusion Protocols  Still in need of Prospective Randomized trials to standardize protocols

 Gonzalez et al. (2007) FFP should be given earlier to trauma patients requiring massive transfusions. Journal of Trauma. Jan 62(1)  Coagulopathies can be improved with strict protocols  1:1 PRBC to FFP

 Davis et al 2004  ICP monitor placement  157 patients in 3 groups  INR  INR  INR>1.7  No difference in complications between the groups and INR correction with FFP only delayed monitor placement and treatment

 Ilyas et al 2008  Earlier correction of INR with Factor VIIa verses platelet transfusion  4 units vs 7 units of plasma  Correction time was significantly improved  2.4 hours vs 10 hrs

 Williams et al 2008 Journal of Trauma  Elderly patients classified as 50 and older  INR >1.5 had a mortality rate of 22.6 % vs 8.2%  Suggestive of early monitoring and correction or INR in anticoagulated patients 50 and older

Identify and correct any specific defect of hemostasis Use non-transfusional drugs whenever possible RBC transfusion for surgical procedures or large blood loss