Bleeding disorder resident survival guide
Bleeding disorder Resident Survival Guide |
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Overview |
Causes |
FIRE |
Diagnosis |
Treatment |
Do's |
Don'ts |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1];
Overview
Causes
Coagulopathy
The following are the causes of coagulopathy (defects in coagulation):
Genetic:
Hemorrhagic Disorders
- Factor VIII Deficiency
- Factor IX Deficiency
- Von Willebrand Factor Deficiency
- Factor XI Deficiency
- Factor II, V, VII, X Deficiency (Common Pathway Proteins)
- Factor XIII and Fibrinogen Deficiency
Hypercoaguable Diseases
- Antithrombin III Deficiency
- Protein C and S Deficiency
Acquired:
- Prohemorrhagic Liver Diseases
- Vitamin K Deficiency
- Drugs such as:
- Warfarin
- Heparin
- Hemodilution and massive transfusion
- Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
- Immunoglobulin mediated Factor Deficiency (VIII, V, XIII, X)
- Hyperfibrinolysis
- Venom Induced
Prothrombotic:
- Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia
- Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome
- Microvascular Thrombosis (Warfarin Induced Skin Necrosis)
Platelet Related Disorders
Congenital:
- Glanzmann's Thrombasthenia
- Bernard-Soulier Syndrome
- Von Willebrand's Disease
Acquired
- Myeloproliferative Disorders
- Uremia
- Drugs (NSAIDs, Aspririn, Clopidogrel etc.)
- Neoplasia
- Monoclonal Gammopathies
- DIC
- Ehlrichiosis
- Retroviral Infection
- Snake Venom
- Cirrhosis
FIRE
A Focused Initial Rapid Evaluation (FIRE) should be performed to identify patients with severe bleeding and in need of immediate intervention.
Boxes in red signify that an urgent management is needed Abbreviations
Boxes in red signify that an urgent management is needed.
Diagnosis
Treatment
Do's
Don'ts
References
Assess the patient for bleeding and screen with CBC, PT, aPTT | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Soft tissue hematoma, deep internal hemoorhage, hemarthrosis | Superficial cutaneous or mucous membrane bleeding | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Yes | No | {{{C03 }}} | {{{ B02 }}} | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||