Hemorrhage  and Thrombosis 
COAGULATION BASICS 
1. Overview 
A. Primary hemostasis  
1) Platelet (a) adhesion, (b) activation, (c)  aggregation    
B. Secondary hemostasis   
1) Activation of plasma coagulation (form fibrin)  
a) Extrinsic pathway (via tissue factor)  
b) Intrinsic pathway (subendothelium or  foreign contact)  
c) Common pathway     
2) Inhibition of systemic clotting  
a) Natural anticoagulants (AT III, Protein C &  S)  
b) Fibrinolytic system, i.e. Plasmin (degrades  fibrin(ogen))   
C. Other  reactions  
1) Complement activation (increased permeability,  cell lysis)  
2) Kinin generation (vascular dilation,  increased permeability)  
2. Platelet Function 
A. Contact  
1) With subendothelium after endothelial injury  
2) With proteins adsorbed onto synthetic  surfaces  
B. Adhesion  
1) Via attachment mechanisms i.e. Glycoprotein Ib/IX   
2) (GP Ib/IX) receptor   
C. Activation  
1) Begins as platelets spread with a conformational  change  
2) Release TxA2,  ADP, serotonin, (PF4, BTG)  
D. Aggregation  
1) ADP induced change in GpIIb/IIIa  receptor permits binding of adhesive proteins, like fibrinogen, between  platelets  
PHARMACOLOGY 
3. Anticoagulants 
A. Heparin  
1) Glycosaminoglycan, MW 3K - 100K  
2) Acts by binding enzyme AT III  
a) (AT III inhib's IIa,Xa,IXa,XIa,XIIa)  
3) Half life is 60-90 minutes  
4) Monitored with aPTT or ACT  
5) Complications: bleeding; HIT =>  thrombosis, "white clot"  
6) (Ab versus Hep-PF4  complex); osteoporosis  
4. Alternatives to heparin  (future) 
A. Hirudin (Hirulog, synthetic  analog)  
1) From leeches, direct inhibitor of thrombin  
2) Does not require ATIII  
3) Prolongs TT, aPTT, PT, and ACT  
B. Ancrod  
1) From venom of Malayan pit viper   
C. Others 
5.  Warfarin 
A. Acts as Vitamin K antagonist   
1) (Vitamin K required for Fx II, VI, IX, X; Prot  C,S)   
B. Half-life is 36 to  42 hours  
C. Monitored w/ INR = Pt. PT /  Control PT  
D. Reversed w/FFP  (immediate); Vit K (8-24 hrs)  
E. Complications  
1) Bleeding, skin necrosis (Protein C & S  deficiency), fetal abnormalities  
6. Antiplatelet Agents 
A. Aspirin  
1) Inhibits cyclo oxygenase (rate-limiting enzyme  for PG's)  
a) Reduces TxA2 from  platelets (causes aggregation)  
b) (Low dose inhibits Plt cyclo oxygenase but  not endothelium)   
2) Irreversible inhibition for Plt  lifetime (7-10 days)   
B. Ticlopidine (ASA  substitute)  
1) Blocks fibrin-GpIIb/IIIa  interaction  
2) Onset slow, 2-3 days    
C. Dipyridamole  
1) Inhibits Plt adhesion    
D. IV Dextran (40 - MW  40,000 daltons)  
1) Decreases Plt-vascular endothelial interaction  
2) Decreases von Willebrand factor  
7. Hemostatic Agents 
A. Protamine  
1) Basic protein, binds heparin  
2) 1 mg protamine = 100 U heparin  
3) Adverse reactions  
a) Transient systemic hypotension  
(1) Related to infusion rate, total dose     
b) Anaphylaxis - pulmonary hypertension,  systemic hypotension, bradycardia  
(1) (Risk factors - prior exposure, DM's/NPH)  
8.  Aprotinin 
A. Mechanism: proteolytic  enzyme inhibitor  
1) Inhibits fibrinolysis, kinin activation, platelet  activation   
B. Benefits  
1) Decreased blood loss, decreased systemic response  to CPB     
C. Risks  
1) Prothrombotic effects, renal failure (?)  
2) Anaphylaxis with re-exposure (cutaneous  testing, predose)   
D. Usage guidelines  
1) Patient risk should influence use - high risk  patients (reoperations, long procedures, coagulopathy, need to avoid  transfusions)  
2) ACT monitoring   
E. Other agents  
1) Amicar (Epsilon-amino caproic acid)  
2) Desmopressin (DDAVP)   
ANTICOAGULATION  FOR CPB 
9. Heparin 
A. Standard initial dose = 300  U/kg  
B. Maintain ACT > 300-350  (>300?)  
C. Monitor with ACT 
1) (or direct Heparin concentrations)    
D. Redose to maintain  therapeutic level  
1) 100 U/kg every 60 - 90 minutes (approx.)  
2) Use dose-response curve   
E. Protamine for  heparin reversal  
1) Estimate heparin present (dose response curve)  
2) Give 1.1 - 1.5 mg protamine : 100 U heparin   
3) Confirm reversal to baseline  
HEMOSTASIS  WITH CPB 
10. Basic Considerations with Cardiopulmonary  Bypass (CPB) 
A. Cardiopulmonary bypass leads  to:  
1) Activation of clotting cascades  
2) Activation of fibrinolytic system  
3) Platelet activation and removal  
4) Kinin system activation  
5) Complement activation   
B. Results in  hemostatic derangement  
C. Results in systemic  inflammatory responses  
11. Blood Conservation Options 
A. Cell saver recycling  
B. Hemoconcentration of  excess CPB blood  
C. Reinfusion of shed blood  from chest tubes  
1)    (Consider time, volume, infection hazard)    
D. Prevention/reversal  of bleeding diathesis  
1) Optimization of heparin/protamine use  
2) Autologous plasma, fresh whole blood  
3) Aprotinin (Trasylol)  
4) Epsilon-amino caproic acid (Amicar)   
E. Heparinzed CPB  circuits  
1) More biocompatable, more thrombo resistant  
D. Autologous blood  donations (with erythropoietin)  
HEMORRHAGE   
12. Post-CPB 
A. Consider  
1) Surgical bleeding  
2) Heparin excess  
a) Incomplete neutralization; reinfusion of  anticoagulated blood; heparin rebound      
3) Clotting cascade procoagulant  deficiency  
5) Platelet dysfunction or thrombocytopenia  
4) DIC, depleted fibrinogen (preop  thrombolytics)   
B. Exploration (< 3 -  5%)  
1) >500/h x1 hr; >400/hr x 2 hrs; >300/hr x  3 hrs;  
2) >1000 total in 4 hrs; >1200 total in 5  hrs   
THROMBOSIS 
13. CABG Graft Patency 
A. Vein patency rate = 75-90%  at 1 year  
B. Technique is important  
1) Avoid endothelial injury   
C. Antiplatelet therapy   
1) ASA, before or within POD 1 to > 1 year  
2) Ticlopidine if allergic to ASA, or with  coronary endarterectomy  
3) Persantine, likely adds nothing   
14. Prosthetic Valves 
A. Mechanical valves  
1) T-E rate = 2 - 4% per patient-year  
2) Coumadin, INR=2.5-3.5, any position  
a) (ACCP/NHLBI consensus opinion)  
b) Bleeding complication rate = 2-3% per  patient-year    
3) Adding anti-platelet drug =>  decreased T-E, increased bleeding  
a) Reserved for T-E despite therapeutic coumadin    
3) Bioprosthetic valves  
a) T-E: greatest 6-12 wks post-op then 2% per  patient-year  
b) Coumadin, INR=2-3 x 3 months (Opt for AVR)  
c) With large, LA, LA clot, prior CVA - extend  x 3-12 mos    
4) Valve thrombosis  
a) Thrombolytics emerging as front-line therapy   
15. CAD 
A. Acute MI  
1) Heparin => decreased LV thrombus/embolism  
a) Especially large (anterior) MI's, LV dysfunction       
2) Coumadin - possibly beneficial    
B. Unstable angina  
1) Heparin + ASA   
THROMBOSIS  - DVT 
16. General 
A. Risk factors (Virchow's  triad)  
1) Stasis - immobility, surgery, CHF/atrial  fibrillation, obesity  
2) Hypercoagulable states, BCP's, malignancy  
3) Vein injury   
B. 48% incidence after  CABG  
C. Prophylaxis  
1) Mechanical, SQ Heparin  
2) (ASA, Persantine - ineffective)   
17. Therapy  
A. Distal DVT - low risk for  pulmonary embolism  
B. Proximal DVT -  Anticoagulate  
1) Heparin => Warfarin (INR 2-3) x 3-6 mos  
2) IVC filter if anticoagulation  contraindicated or ineffective   
PULMONARY  EMBOLISM 
18. Incidence 
A. 630,000/year with 200,000  deaths/year  
B. Origin  
1) DVT (above calf), tumor, foreign body  
C. Pathophysiology  
!) Combination of mechanical and reflex effects  
2) Cardiodynamic effects, cyanosis, pulmonary  vasoconstriction 
D. Pathologic sequelae  
1) Most resolve spontaneously  
2) May lead to pulmonary infarction  
19. Diagnosis of Pulmonary  Embolism 
A. Clinical  
1) SOB, tachycardia, increased P2  
2) Classic hemoptysis, pleural rub, S3/4,  cyanosis - 1/4 of patients  
3) Signs & symptoms of DVT - 1/3 of  patients    
B. Examinations  
1) CxR: normal +/-  decreased vascularity (Westermark's sign)  
2) ECG: dysrhythmia, ST depression,  T-inversion (III,AVF,V1,V4-5)  
3) V:Q scanning  
4) Pulmonary arteriography   
20. Management 
A. Anticoagulation  
1) Heparin x 8-10 days (until DVT adherent)  
2) Coumadin x 6 weeks-6 months    
B. Thrombolytic therapy   
C. Percutaneous extraction  
D. Surgical management  
1) IVC Interruption  
a) Anticoag contraindicated, recurrent pulmonary  emboli on anticoagulation, multiple small pulmonary emboli, pulmonary  hypertension, after pulmonary embolectomy      
E. Pulmonary  embolectomy  
1) Indications: persistent hypotension, hypoxia  despite medical Rx   
PULMONARY  EMBOLECTOMY 
21. Indication for operation 
A. Hypotension, hypoxia,  despite medical therapy (O2, anticoagulation, inotropes)  
B. Operation  
1) Median sternotomy, cardiopulmonary bypass,  bicaval cannulation, pulmonary artery exploration, lung compression  
C. Results  
1) 25% mortality (major cause - cardiac  complications) 
EXTENDED  OUTLINE 
Hemorrhagic and  Thrombotic Complications of Cardiac Surgery 
1. History 
A. 1953 - Gibbon - -first use  of CPB for open heart surgery in a human - screen oxygenator  
B. Early screen, bubble, and  disc oxygenators were traumatic to blood à frequent bleeding diatheses  
2. Pre-op hemotsatic disorders 
A. Personal/family history and  PE are most important tools for identifying a bleeding diathesis  
B. Hereditary bleeding  disorders  
1) Hemophilia  
a) X-linked recessive  
b) A = Factor VIII deficiency - tx= factor  VIII concentrates  
c) B = Factor IX deficiency - tx=prothrombin  complex or FIX  
d) Factor XI -  less common  
e) aPTT prolonged, PT, platelet (plt) fxn,  bleeding time (BT) are normal  
2) von Willebrand’s Disease  
a) Most common inherited bleeding disorder  
b) von Willebrand’s factor stabilizes FVII  essential for plt fxn  
c) Mucocutaneous bleeding and bruising  
d) Prolonged bleeding time, impaired plt  aggregation to ristocetin  
e) Frequently a prolonged aPTT  
3) Treatment  
a) A (FVIII deficiency )-FVIII concentrates  
b) B (FIX deficiency) - prothrombin complex or  FIX  
c) Emergency - FFP or cryoprecipitate (for  FVIII or vWf deficiency)  
4) “Acquired hemophilia” -  autoantibodies to FVIII  
C. Acquired bleeding  disorders  
1) Plt dysfunction 2° to abnormal heart valves or  assist devices  
a) BT helpful  
b) Plt transfusions will only be transiently  helpful  
c) Plt transfusion after discontinuation of  CPB  
2) Congenital cyanotic ht dz  
a) Impaired plt aggregation in 14% in acyanotic CHD,  38% cyanotic  
b) More profound with  hypoxemia and  hemoconcentration  
c) Hepatic synthesis of clotting factors may  be impaired  
d) Phlebotomy and hemodilution to Hct 50-60%  improves plt number and fxn  
3) Drugs  
a) Most common cause of impaired hemostasis in  cardiac surgery  
b) Anticoagulants  
(1) Coumadin - hold for 1-2d pre-op, give Vit K or  FFP  
(2) Heparin - response may vary after pre-op  heparin  
c) Drugs that affect plts  
(1) ASA  
(a) Increases post-op blood loss  
(b) D/C 5-7days pre-op  
(c) Prolonged BT - correct w/8-12U plts  
d) Fibrinolytics  
(1) tPA, urokinase, streptokinase  
(2) Can reduce fibrinogen levels below safe  (100mg/dl)  
(3) FDP’s interfere w/plt fxn  
(4) Heparin can compound the effect  
4) Renal, hepatic failure and  disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC)  
a) Uremia  
(1) Defect in plt fxn due to plasma factors and  anemia  
(2) vWf-plt interacions impaired  
(3) Plt transfusions ineffective due to uremic  plasma  
(4) Tx= correct  anemia, dialysis, cryo (for  vWf), DDAVP  
b) Hepatic insufficiency  
(1) Impaired synthesis of clotting factors (esp. vit  K dependent - II,VII,IX,X)  
(2) Tx= vit K if PT prolonged, plts if  thrombocytopenic  
3. Effects of  cardiopulmonary bypass on hemostasis 
A. Initial events of  blood-surface interactions  
1) Adsorption of fibrinogen and other plasma  proteins to foreign surface is initial event  
2) Contact activation of factor XII (intrinsic  pathway)  
3) Platelet adherence, release of cytoplasmic  granules, thromboxane A-2  
4) Contact activation initiates complement   cascade and kallikrein/kinin system  
5) Decreased velocity from hemodilution may ß  damage to formed elements in blood, ß net blood loss, improve capillary  perfusion  
6) Frothing, high shear rates, and turbulence  in pump damage formed elements àhemolysis, plt activation  
7) Bubble oxygenator (blood-gas)contributes  significantly to impaired hemostasis after 2-3 h. total bypass time  
8) Intracardiac suction, “pump sucker”  
B. Dynamics of plasma  coagulation during CPB 
1) Significant amounts of plasma proteins are not  lost in extracorporeal circuit  
2)  Though diluted (£50%),  clotting factor  levels remain adequate  
3) Prolonged clotting times post-op correlate  poorly w/bleeding  
4) Fibrinolysis  
a) ??responsible for derangements of clotting tests  early post-op  
b) Activated plasmin degrades fibrin and  fibrinigen  
c) FDP’s act as anticoagulants  
d) Aprotinin (see below)  
C. Platelet  dynamics during CPB  
1) Number  
a) ¯ to 40-50% baseline in 1st 10-15 min, then  stabilizes  
(1) “Passivation” of foreign surfaces after initial  exposure  
(2) Reduced plt adhesiveness  
b) Rarely < 75,000/mL  
c) Plt ct returns to normal 3-5d post-op  (?sequestration in liver)  
d) Microembolus formation contributes to  platelet consumption  
2) Function - substantially altered  
a) Plasma levels of Tx A2, plt-specific proteins  rise at onset of CPB  
b) Plt stores of ADP & ATP depleted  
c) Fxn returns to normal 3-5d post-op  
d) Clot retraction impaired by heparin  
(1) High concentrations of heparin impair  vWf-platelet binding  
(2) Reduction in clot retraction correlates  w/post-op bleeding  
e) Hypothermia, plasmin, other proteases   
f) Neutrophil activation by surface  glycoprotein  (GMP-140 or P-selectin)  
g) Attempts to inhibit plt activation during   CPB (ASA, dextran) à excessive hemorrhage  
4. Conduct of  cardiopulmonary bypass 
A. Heparin  
1) Heterogenous family of glycosaminoglycans, not  protein (6,000-20,000 dalton)  
2) Accelerates by 2,500-fold the  neutralization of thrombin by antithrombin III (ATIII)  
3) Affects factors IX, X, XI, XII, activation  of heparin Cofactor II, inhibition of smooth muscle proliferation,  cytoprotective  
4) Source of heparin (porcine gut mucosa or  bovine lung) has little effect on anticoagulation,   but long-term  bovine lung heparin more frequently associated w/HIT  
5) Platelet factor 4 is an anti-heparin  compound  
6) Monitoring  
a) ACT or equivalent whole-blood clotting time at  least q1h - maintain 300-350 sec  
7) Heparin rebound - coagulopathy and  increased clotting times  
a) Pathogenesis not understood - ?protein-bound  heparin unavailable to protamine  
b) Tx=protamine  
c) FFP will not reverse effects of residual  heparin  
B. Protamine- the  sole effective heparin antidote  
1) Small, highly positively charged protein, binds  heparin  
2) Derived from fish sperm  
3) 1mg protamine /100U heparin (0.6-0.7 per  Dr. Hurst)  
4) Toxicity  
a) Excess can have anticoagulant effect - overrated  
b) Myocardial depression  
c) Vasodilitation  
5) Heparin-protamine complexes -  mediators of inflammation and anaphylaxis -    granulocytopenia, pulm  sequestration of leukocytes, vasodilitation  
6) Allergic reaction (rare) - pulm edema,  hypoxia, hypotension more common in DM exposed to NPH  
5. Perioperative adjuncts to  hemostasis and blood conservation 
A. Intra-op (topical agents)  
1) Bovine thrombin - platelet activation and direct  fibrinogen clotting-neutral pH  
2) Oxidized cellulose(Surgicell) - contact  activation of coagulation cascade - surface for fibrin polymerization  
3) Microcrystalline bovine collagen (Avitene,  Instat)-plt activation and adhesion  
4) Hemostatic glues  
a) Cyanoacrylate  
b) Fibrin glue=cryo (for fibrinogen)+bovine  thrombin  
B.  Autotransfusion  
1) Pre-op phlebotomy and reinfusion post-bypass  
2) Cellsaver - washes red cells (no plts or  clotting factors)  
3) Shed mediastinal blood - no study has shown  reduction in use of banked, homologous blood  
C. DDAVP  
1) Vasopressin analog  
2) Transiently increases vWf and FVIII  
3) Probably only useful w/impaired  vWf-dependent hemostasis (low vWf, drugs, plt receptor)  
D. Aprotinin  
1) Protease inhibitor from bovine lung  
2) Inhibits kallikrein activity, and in turn,  contact activation of coag cascade  
3) Inhibits conversion of plasminogen to  plasmin  
4) ?secondary preservation of plt fxn  
5) Most effective in preventing initial  contact activation of blood and plts  
6. Evaluation of post-op bleeding 
A. <3% require early  re-exploration  
B. 1-3 u PRBC in  uncomplicated cases  
C. How much is acceptable? -  author >100ml/hr for several hours; see chart from Kirklin  
D. Transfusion: indications  and risks  
1) Hct 24%, Hb 8g/dl may be acceptable -  individualize  
2) Hepatitis in 7% (mostly hepatitis C)  
3) HIV - 0.25% of donor pool is HTLV-III  antibody +  
E. Differential  diagnosis of excessive bleeding  
1) Plt ct, PT, PTT in all pts post-op  
2) Heparin excess, integrity of coagulation  cascade, plts  
F. Excess  anticoagulants  
1) Heparin or FDP  
2) Protamine trial - aPTT or ACT will  normalize if heparin-related  
3) Thrombin time +/- protamine - protamine  will not correct FDP-related coagulopathy  
G. Thrombocytopenia and  plt dysfunction  
1) Plt ct <75,000 + bleeding - tx w/8-12U plts  
2) Normal plt count, normal coags + bleeding -  DDAVP, plts  
3) Bleeding time inaccurate post-op  
H. Pathologic  fibrinolysis  
1) All clotting times abnormal, thrombocytopenia,  hypofibrinogenemia - tx = transfusions + antifibrinolytics (amicar,  aprotinin)  
2) Cryoprecipitate (supra normal finbrinogen,  vWf, FVIII concentrations) - for fibrinogen <100mg/dL  
I. Massive transfusion  
1) Plasma protein dilution (1-1.5 blood volume  transfusion)  
2) Thrombocytopenia most frequent derangement  
7. Special hemostatic challenges 
A. Jehovah’s Witnesses  
1) Tx pre-op w/vitamins, iron, erythropoietin  
2) 7% mortality  
B. Heparin-induced  thrombocytopenia (5% receiving continuous heparin)  
1) Autoantibody to heparin-plt factor 4 complexes  
2) Thrombocytopenia (<100,000) resolves  within days of heparin withdrawl  
3) Dx by plt aggregate testing  
4) Strategy: elective - in vitro testing and  postpone surgery - ab’s go away  
5) Heparin-like substances, LMW heparin have  high cross-reactivity  
6) Org 10172 - rarely induces aggregation  
7) Post-op - D/C all heparin  
8. Future trends 
A. Specific indications for  DDAVP, aprotinin  
B. Novel heparins -  chemically modified  
1) Hirudin - family of direct thrombin inhibitors  
C. Anti-plt drugs  
1) Ab’s to glycoprotein Iib/IIIa)   
2) Synthetic peptides mimic fibrinogen  
9. Thromboembolic complications of  prosthetic valves 
A. INR  
1) DVT - 2.0-3.0  
2) Prosthetic valves - 2.5-3.5  
B. Mechanical valves  
1) Thromboembolic rate  
a) 0.5-3%/PT-yr - overall  
b) MVR = 1-3  
c) AVR = 0.5-2  
2) Addition of an antiplatelet agent  further reduces risk (ASA 160mgQD or dipyridamole 400mgQD)  
3) Bleeding complications 0.7-6.3%/pt-yr  
C. Bioprosthetic valves   
1) Thromboembolism - 2%/pt-yr  
2) More common in first 6-12 wks after  operation  
3) Recommendation - INR 2.0-3.0 for 3 months  
4) ? Benefit from long-term ASA  
D. Complicating  
1) Child-bearing  
a) Warfarin is teratogenic, crosses placenta - bad  for fetus  
b) Self-administration of SC heparin to PTT  1.5-2 x control  
c) Antiplt tx alone?  
2) Vascular and prosthetic grafts  
a) SVG - 75-90% 1-yr patency  
b) ASA + dipyridamole helps - ASA early  post-op, dipyridamole pre-op  
c) ASA alone may be effective   
 
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