c10.tao hinh lai
C11.Haematology
Anaemia occurs when the level of functional haemoglobin in the blood falls below the reference level appropriate to the sex and age of an individual. Alternatively, anaemia can be defined as a reduction in red blood cell count or in the packed cell volume.
Anaemia is a major world public health problem, due to poor diet, chronic diseases, wars and famine: this chapter considers the more common causes. It does not deal with anaemia due to sudden bleeding.
Bone marrow failure is discussed briefly, as a basis for understanding the use of new biolog-
ical agents. The clotting system and the management of anticoagulation is covered in the final
section.Some other aspects of haematology (e.g. leukaemias) are covered in Chapter 10, clotting
problems affecting the cardiovascular system in Chapter 4 and some aspects of blood transfusion
in Chapter 2.
Red blood cell production and functionErythpoiesis
Mature red blood cells (RBCs, erythrocytes) are
biconcave discs 7.5 lm in diameter containing
haemoglobin(Hb),
which
comprises
about
a
third of the cell mass. This shape provides a large
surface area for oxygen diffusion into the cell.The erythrocytes are derived from the same
common pluripotent stem cells as all the other
formed elements of the blood (see Chapter 2,
Figure 2.1) and ultimately from lineage-specificbone
marrow
cells
under
the
influence
of
cytokines (primarily interleukins and granulo-cyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor, GM-
CSF) and, finally, erythropoietin (EPO). The latter
is a hormone produced in peritubular kidney cells, and to a lesser extent in the liver, in
response to anaemia and reduced tissue oxygenlevels that together stimulate erythroid precur-
sorsto
divideandmature.Thismechanismbalances RBC production precisely to their loss
through haemorrhage and senescence, etc.
Chronic renal disease (see Chapter 14), many
other chronic diseases and haemodialysis causeEPO deficiency, which are treated with recombi-
nanthuman
epoetin (EPO).However,somepatients develop antibodies to this and repeated
twice- or thrice-weekly IV or SC injections are
required (SC injections are contra-indicated in
chronic renal failure). Many epoetin analoguesand mimetics are being explored with a view to
minimizing these problems (see References and
further reading).
Maturationinto
erythroid
colony-forming units (CFU-E)
is
promoted
by
an
erythroid colony-stimulating
factor
(CSF-E).
As
the
cells mature in the bone marrow they become increas-
ingly sensitive to EPO and there is progressive loss of ribosomal RNA and mitochondria and increased synthesis of cytoplasmic Hb. In parallel with this, the nucleus becomes condensed and is finally lost, forming reticulocytes.
Reticulocytes are released into the circulationafter about 1-2 days in the bone marrow: nucle-
ated RBCs are not normally present in blood.
Reticulocytes normally retain some ribosomal
RNA and continue to synthesize Hb for a further1-2 days in the circulation, during which time
the RNA and mitochondria are lost completely
and the mature, enucleate erythrocyte is formed.
The process of erythpoiesis is summarized inFigure 2.1 (p. 27). The reticulocytes normally
form about 1% of the total erythrocytes, but this
proportion is increased if there is loss of red cells,
e.g. due to traumatic bleeding or haemolysis,because increased numbers of reticulocytes are
released into the blood as a normal response, to
recover oxygen-carrying capacity.
Becausethe
mature
erythrocyte
does
not
contain any DNA or RNA it is not a true cell
and has often been described as a ‘corpuscle’.However, it has a well-defined, stable structure
and its description as a ‘red blood cell’ is uni-
versally
used.
Erythrocytes
have
a
strong,
deformable cytoskeleton that enables them to
pass through the smallest blood vessels without
damage. The cytoskeleton is composed of sev-eral interlinked proteins, i.e. alpha- and beta-
spectrins, actin, ankyrin and proteins 4.1, 4.2
and 4.9. The latter proteins are identified by
numbers corresponding to their relative positions on electrophoresis.About 0.8% (100%/120) of the original cell
population is lost per day and this is normally
balanced by a reticulocyte gain. If erythropoiesis
fails completely, e.g. in aplastic anaemia (Table11.6), the red cell and reticulocyte counts decline by about 6% per week, with no compensatory reticulocyte gain. Successful treatment in this situation increases the proportion of reticulo-
cytes to above normal levels in the short term, until normal function is achieved.
Although RBCs lose their ability to synthesize
proteinand
carry
out
oxidative
metabolism
they
retain
some
crucial
metabolic
capacity.
This includes the anaerobic Embden-Meyerhof
glycolytic
pathway,
which
provides
four
functions:
•
Production of energy via ATP.
•Maintenance of the red cell membrane and
cell architecture.
•Formation of NADH to maintain the iron of
haem in the ferrous state.
•Production
of2,3-diphosphoglycerate(2,3-DPG) that modulates Hb function (see below).
Thereis
alsoahexosemonophosphateshunt, which provides NADPH to preserve the
sulphydryl groups of HbA and so maintain Hb
tertiary structure. This metabolism is essential to
protect the cells from oxidative stress and yieldthe
normal
erythrocyte
life
span
of
about
120 days. These pathways are outlined in Figure11.1.
The survival of RBCs and the sites of destruc-
tion of senescent RBCs, primarily the liver and
the spleen, can be determined by radiolabellingwith 51Cr and monitoring the change in radia-
tion levels with time and the sites of concentra-
tion of radiation, measured with an external
gamma-camera.Table 11.1 lists normal values for some haema-
tological and biochemical parameters.
Haemoglobin synthesis and function
Haemoglobin (deoxygenated haemoglobin, Hb)is the component of the erythrocyte that trans-
ports oxygen from the lungs to the tissues and
some carbon dioxide from the tissues to the
lungs. Hb is produced in the mitochondria of thedeveloping red cells. In adults, most of it is HbA,
an allosteric protein composed of two alpha
polypeptide chains and two beta polypeptide
chains, i.e. a2b2, the remainder comprising about3% of HbA2
(a2d2) plus HbF (fetal Hb). HbF is
slightly different from the adult form, being a2c2,which binds oxygen more strongly than HbA.
Eachglobin
moleculebindsonemoleculeofthe iron-porphyrin haem, so the complete Hb
molecule contains four molecules of haem.
Also present in the red cell is 2,3-diphospho-
glycerate (2,3-DPG), formed by red cell glycolysis(Figure 11.1), which binds the beta chains and
stabilizes the Hb in a tense conformation that
has a lower affinity for oxygen than the relaxed
conformation produced when Hb binds oxygento form oxyhaemoglobin (HbO2). This has impli-
cations for Hb function. The 2,3-DPG is formed
in the RBCs mostly under the relatively anaer-
obic conditions in the tissues and its bindingpromotes the release of oxygen there. In the
aerobic conditions in the lungs less 2,3-DPG is
produced, thus favouring the relaxed conforma-
tion that promotes oxygen uptake to form HbO2.The differing pH and carbon dioxide concentra-
tions between the lungs and the tissues reinforce
these reactions, thus favouring oxygen uptake by
Hb in the lungs and HbO2 dissociation to releaseoxygen in the tissues.
Under normal conditions about 98.5% of the
oxygen is transported as HbO2 and the remainder
is dissolved in the plasma. Carbon dioxide, beingvery soluble, is carried mostly (70%) as bicar-
bonate in the plasma, 23% is combined with Hb
as carbaminohaemoglobin (HbCO2) and about
7%is
carried
dissolved
in
plasma
which,
in
equilibrium with the bicarbonate, forms a pH
buffering system.The Hb from effete red cells is broken down into iron, porphyrins and amino acids, which
are recycled.
Iron metabolism
The dietary iron intake is matched very closelyto iron losses. There is no specific mechanism
for transport into the gut and iron lost in this
way, e.g. by shedding of enterocytes, is highly
conserved. The normal average daily diet in theUK
contains
about 15-30 mg
of
ferric
iron,
mostlyfrom
iron-fortified
breakfast
cereals,
less
than 10%
of
which
is
absorbed
in
the
duodenum and jejunum. The factors affecting
iron absorption are listed in Table 11.2.
Before this iron can be absorbed it must bereduced to the ferrous state. Specialized cells in
the mucosal crypts of the gut migrate to the
luminal
surface,
where
they
produce
a
ferri-
reductaseand
adivalentmetaltransporter(DMT1)
in
the
villi
of
the
enterocyte
brush
border. The DMT1 then carries the ferrous ironacross the cell membrane by an active transport
lood cell production and function709
process.
Iron is
stored
in
the
cells
as
ferritin or
transferred
into
the
plasma
by
another
transporter via the enterocyte base.Three control mechanisms are involved. After an iron-rich meal a dietary regulator makes the villi resistant to further iron absorption for some days. The ‘memory’ of the iron status of the
body at the time of their formation then regu-
lates iron transport into the enterocytes. Finally, there
is
a
means
of
signalling
the
level
of erythropoiesis to the enterocytes. Further iron is lost from ferritin stores in the enterocytes when these are shed into the gut lumen.
There is also some dietary haem iron from
animal meat, and some from Hb breakdown,
which is more readily absorbed than elementaliron.
Iron transport and storage
Most of the total body iron is transported in the
plasmaas
Hb.
However,
the
serum
contains
about 11-30 lmol/L, bound to the specific trans-
porter transferrin, which is synthesized in theliver: the higher levels occurring in the morning.
Each molecule of transferrin binds two atoms of
ferric iron derived mostly from RBC breakdown
in reticuloendothelial macrophages and oxidizedin arterial blood. The iron-transferrin complex
binds to specific receptors on erythroblasts and
reticulocytes in the bone marrow, where the iron is released and recycled into haem.
About a third of the total iron load is stored inthe
hepatocytes,
reticuloendothelial
cells
and
skeletal muscle, mostly as ferritin and normallyabout a third as haemosiderin. The latter is an
insoluble protein-iron complex found in the
liver, spleen and bone marrow, where it can be
visualized by light microscopy after staining,unlike ferritin.
Persistenceof
haemosiderinin erythroblastmitochondria occurs in sideroblastic anaemia
(see below), which may be inherited or acquired
(Table 11.2).
It
is
due
to
a
failure
of
haem
synthesis,which
mayreflectpoisoningofenzymes by drugs, e.g. isoniazid, or toxins, e.g.
alcohol or lead.
Useful indicators of iron status include serum
iron, ferritin level and total iron-binding capacity(TIBC).
Anaemia
The unqualified use of the term ‘anaemia’ means
simply that the level of functional Hb in theblood falls below the reference level appropriate
to the sex and age of an individual. The WHO
defines these lower levels arbitrarily as 13 g/dL in
adult males (normal range (N)13-17) and
12 g/dL in adult females (N
12-16). Children
of both sexes below 14 years of age have lower
levels, the cut-off for anaemia being 11 g/dL in
those aged 6 months to 6 years and 12 g/dL inthe 6-14
age
group.
Levels
are
normally
measured at sea level. These values may differbetween populations and at altitudes where the
partialpressure
ofoxygenislow,causingincreased
RBC
and
Hb
production.
However,
many apparently normal individuals have Hblevels below these arbitrary values.
Defined in this way anaemia is the common
outcome of many different pathologies, i.e. it is
a secondary condition, and it is important todiagnose the underlying cause, so that specific
treatment can be given. Thus some forms of
anaemia have an adjectival prefix that describes
the underlying disorder, e.g. pernicious anaemia,aplastic
anaemia (p. 725),
leucoerythroblastic
anaemia, due to space-occupying lesions of the bone marrow, e.g. leukaemia.Anaemia is a very common blood disorder and is believed to affect about 30 million people
worldwidebut
thetrue figureisunknownbecause of poor data from deprived areas with poor nutrition and unknown levels of intestinal parasites causing blood loss.
Itis
convenienttodiscussanaemiaunder three headings:•
Normocytic, normochromic. •
Microcytic, hypochromic. •
Macrocytic.
Investigation of anaemiaIt is not possible to diagnose anaemia by observa-
tion, e.g. by unusual pallor of complexion or of the inner surface of the lower eyelid. However, if there are other symptoms or signs that may be explicable by anaemia these features may prompt investigation. Anaemic patients often complain of non-specific conditions (tiredness, reduced exer-
cise tolerance and shortness of breath), but these are more usually due to very common condi-
tions (being overweight, inadequate exercise and unfitness, depression, and CVD).The results of simple laboratory tests, obtained with automated blood cell counters, which give rapid results, include:
•Mean cell volume (MCV, in femtolitres [fL]).
•
RBC distribution width (RDW), a measure of
the variability of MCV.•
Mean corpuscular Hb (MCH, in picograms/
RBC [pg]).
•
Mean cell Hb concentration (MCHC, in g/dL).
Secondary parameters derived from these, e.g.
the MCV/MCH ratio, are also used. However, the
microscopic examination of a stained blood filmpermits an examination of red cell morphology
which, considered with other laboratory and
patient data, usually gives the diagnosis. Even if
these data are not conclusive they will guidefurther
testing
for
specific
conditions,
e.g.
microscopy of bone marrow to investigate cellmorphology or after a trephine with a special
largeneedle
toobtainasampleofboneto observe bone marrow architecture and the pres-ence of abnormal cells. These samples are usually
obtainedfrom
theposterioriliaccrest.Thetrephine biopsy has to be processed as a tissue
sample,so
theresultisavailableonlyafterseveral days.
Normocytic, normochromic anaemias
One group in this category, i.e. those with a
normal or low reticulocyte count and normalbone marrow morphology, are often described as
secondary anaemias, because there is always an
Anaemia
711
underlying condition(Figure
11.2). Diagnosis then depends on tests to identify the latter and exclude serious pathology, e.g.•
Bleeding, destruction of RBCs (haemolysis),
especially in the acute stage.
•
Leukaemias and bone metastases (secondary
deposits) from primary cancers elsewhere inthe body (see Chapter 10).
•Aplastic
anaemiasorabnormalcellproduction.
•Renal failure, causing failure of erythropoietin
production.
•The early stages of the anaemia of chronic
disease (see below).
Haemolytic anaemiasThe
body
can
respond
up
to
eightfold
by
increasing RBC production and by increasing theamount of active marrow. Provided the rate of
loss is less than the capacity of the marrow to
respond, higher than normal RBC destruction
does not always cause anaemia. However, theproportion
of
reticulocytes
is
increased,
and
there may be spherical or other abnormally-shaped RBCs or red cell fragments. The many possible
causes
of
haemolytic
anaemia (see below) are listed in Table 11.3.
Extravascular haemolysisMost
haemolytic
anaemias
result
from
RBC
breakdown by reticuloendothelial macrophages,notably in the spleen, i.e. extravascular haemol-
ysis. These are often the result of inherited RBC membrane defects.
Inhereditary
spherocytosis(HS)the RBCmembrane is weakened and poorly supported by
the cytoskeleton, resulting in somewhat spher-
ical cells that are more rigid than the normal
biconcavedisks.
The
abnormal
cells
cannot
negotiate the small vessels of the spleen and are
broken down there. The inheritance is usuallyautosomal-dominant and affects about 1/5000
northern Europeans, though it may skip a gener-
ation, but may be due to a recessive pattern of
inheritance, or new random mutations in somecases.
There is a wide variation in the age at presen-
tation, some babies being jaundiced at birth
whereas others may be hardly affected. Chronichaemolysis
causes
pigment
gallstones
(see
Chapter 3), splenomegaly, and folate deficiency.Affected
neonates
require
repeated
blood
transfusionsuntil
they
are
old
enough
for
splenectomy, which is usually curative. However,
splenectomy carries a life-long risk of seriousinfection so is indicated only if justified by the
severityof
thepatient’scondition.Multipleimmunizations and antibiotic prophylaxis are
required.
Hereditary
elliptocytosis
is
about
twice
as
prevalentas
HSandissomewhatsimilar,though milder. Less than 10% have significant
haemolysisand
splenectomyisrequiredonlyoccasionally.
Intravascular haemolysis
In all haemolytic anaemias the RBC survival is reduced, but the survival time is determined
only rarely.Destruction
of
RBCs
within
the
circulation
releases Hb. Some of this is bound by plasmaprotein,
but
excess
is
filtered
at
the
renal
glomeruli and most appears in the urine, thoughsome is reabsorbed by the tubular cells in which it
isdeposited
ashaemosiderinandcanbedetected in the urine. Part of the plasma Hb is
oxidizedto
methaemoglobin,whichcannotfunction as an oxygen carrier and breaks down
to globin and ferrihaem. The latter is usually
bound in the plasma, but excess binds to albumin
as methaemalbumin, which can be detected inAnaemia
713
the plasma photometrically: this is the basis ofthe Schumm test. All of the HbA and its products
are metabolized in the liver and recycled into Hb.
The consequences of intravascular haemolysis include:
•High
serum
unconjugated
bilirubin,
high
urinary urobilinogen and raised serum lactic
dehydrogenase, which are indicators of RBC breakdown.
•
Indicators
of
increased
erythropoiesis,
e.g.
increased proportion of reticulocytes.In some haemolytic anaemias there may also be abnormally-shaped RBCs or red cell fragments (see below).
Abnormal red cell metabolism
The RBC has very restricted metabolic capacity,
theprincipal
systems
being
the
Embden-
Meyerhof pathway and the connected hexose
monophosphate shunt (see Figure 11.1). Thereare
two
main
enzyme
deficiencies
that
may
occur, one each in each of these pathways.Glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase
(G6PD)
deficiency.This is the most common of the
enzyme
deficiencies.
There
are
numerous
isoforms of the enzyme, the genes for which are
X-linked. Heterozygous females may have two
different populations of RBCs and may appear tobe clinically normal but all females homozygous
forthe
mutantareaffected.Theenzymeisinvolved
in
the
production
of
NADPH (see
above) and is crucial for the maintenance ofglutathione, and so the flexibility and integrity
of the RBC. Its absence causes RBC rigidity and
leakage and the oxidation of Hb to methaemo-
globin, which is deposited on the inner surfaceof the membrane. The result is haemolysis in the
spleen. Over 100 mutant forms are known.
G6PD deficiency involves millions of people in central Africa, the Mediterranean borders, the Middle East and South-East Asia. In some areas up to 40% of the population may be affected,
especially males.The reduction of enzyme activity renders the
RBCs very sensitive to oxidative stress. There
may be:
•Neonatal jaundice.
•
Chonic haemolytic anaemia.
•Acute haemolytic episodes due to:
-
Drugs (Table 11.4).
-Bacterial and viral infections and diabetic
ketoacidosis.
-Ingestion of fava beans.
Diagnosis may be difficult because the RBC
count is normal between attacks. However, there
will be evidence of haemolysis, especially during
attacks, though this may be self-limiting becausethe older, more affected RBCs are damaged selec-
tively. Many RBCs will have irregular margins,
with ‘bites’ taken out of the membrane where
deposited methaemoglobin has been removed inthe spleen. Direct assays for G6PD are available.
Treatment involves avoidance of any causative
drugs, treatment of infections (see Chapter 8)
and proper management of diabetes mellitus (seeChapter 9). Blood transfusions are often essential
and splenectomy may help, but this is unlikely.
Pyruvate kinase (PK) deficiency is the second
most common of the enzyme deficiencies, butmuch less so than G6PD. It causes low levels of
ATP and increased levels of 2,3-DPG (see Figure
11.1),
and
so
energy-starved
and
rigid
RBCs.
The high levels of 2,3-DPG (see above) minimize
the severity of anaemia, by increasing oxygen
unloading in the tissues. The blood film shows‘prickle
cells’
and
reticulocytosis.
The
most
prominentsigns
are
anaemia,
jaundice
and
splenomegaly. Exchange blood transfusions are
required in infancy, pregnancy and infections,throughout life. Aplastic crises may occur. In
severe cases, there may be bone changes similar
to those seen in thalassaemia (see below).
Splenectomy may be helpful and may reducethe need for frequent blood transfusions. Folic
acid supplementation is needed (see Figure 11.4).
Abnormal
Hb
synthesis.
These
conditions
may cause abnormal globin chain production
(thalassaemias)
or
abnormal
globin
chain conformation (sickle-cell anaemia).
Thalassaemias occur in a wide arc, stretching from Spain to Indonesia but may occur in any population. The name comes from the Greek
word for sea: all the countries with affected
populations have extensive sea borders. They are the result of differing relative rates of production of the alpha and beta chains, or a completeabsence of one of these.
Beta-thalassaemias are caused by a complete
or relative absence of beta-globin chains, and
affectall
races.
The
excess
of
alpha-chains
combines with gamma and delta Hb chains,
producing very low levels of normal HbA andincreased levels of HbA2
and HbF (see above).
Mutations in the beta-globin gene cause theproduction of unusable forms of Hb. Alpha-
thalassaemias mostly affect Orientals and those
of Middle Eastern origin. Thalassaemia minor
(thalassaemia trait) is an asymptomatic or mildlysymptomatic heterozygous state. Thalassaemia
major is the result of beta-chain gene mutations
giving a homozygous state, or doubly heterozy-
gous state, i.e. the H6 genes from each parent aremutated
in
different
ways.
There
is
severe
anaemiafrom
the
age
of
3-6 months,
when
there is normally a switch from the gamma-
chain production characteristic of fetal Hb (HbF,a2c2), to beta-chain production, characteristic of
normal adult Hb (a2b2). However, HbF synthesis
continues beyond this point and most patients
havesome
HbF.
The
liver
and
spleen
are
enlarged, sometimes grossly, and the erythropoi-
eticbone
marrow
extends
abnormally
into
bones that are not normally haemopoietic, e.g.
in the face and hand, causing facial, and some-times hand, deformities. The anaemia is severe
and regular blood transfusions are required, but
if these are needed frequently splenectomy is
indicated (see above).Frequent transfusions lead to haemosiderosis,
i.e. iron overload from deposition of haemosiderin
in tissues, causing widespread organ damage if it
is not corrected. This requires removal by vene-section (i.e. regular bleeding), provided that the
patient has a functional bone marrow to replace
the leucocytes that are lost. Regular folic acid
supplementationand
ascorbic
acid
are
also
required. The latter enhances iron excretion by
Anaemia715
keeping the excess iron in the more soluble
ferrous state.Complexing with desferrioxamine mesilate, an
ironchelating
agentthatbindstissuestoresrather than Hb iron, is an alternative to venesec-
tion. It is given as an overnight SC infusion, or
by syringe driver, 3-7 times a week according
to need. Desferrioxamine may also be given atthe same time as a blood transfusion, but must
not be mixed with the blood or given via the
same infusion line: administration via the same
cannula when the transfusion is complete isconvenient. Iron excretion is again enhanced by
giving ascorbic acid.
Deferiprone
is
a
newer,
orally
active
iron-
chelatingagent
foruseifdesferrioxamineiscontra-indicated or is not tolerated. However,
fertile women should take strict contraceptive
precautions
because
deferiprone
is
a
known
teratogen and is embryotoxic. Blood dyscrasias,
notably agranulocytosis, have also been reported,
so weekly neutrophil counts must be done andpatients and their carers warned to report imme-
diately any signs of infection, e.g. fever or sore
throat. Filgrastim may be required (see Chapter
10). Care is required if there is any renal orhepatic impairment.
Deferiprone also complexes zinc, so plasma zinc concentrations also need to be monitored. Joint pain may occur.
As usual with complex medications the manu-
facturers’ literature should be consulted on the use of both of these agents.Alpha-thalassaemias
have
a
more
complex
inheritancebecause
alpha-chain
synthesis
is
controlled
by
two
pairs
of
structural
genes,
onepair
fromeachparent.Becausetherearefour
alpha
genes,
there
are
four
possible
conditions:•
Single gene deletion confers the carrier state,
and subjects are haematologically normal.
•
Deletion of two genes causes a mild hypo-
chromic microcytic anaemia (see below), i.e. thalassaemia trait.
•
Deletion
of
three
genes
results
in
HbH
disease. There is a variable degree of anaemia,splenomegaly and the RBCs are typical of
thalassaemia (see above).
•
Deletion of all four genes is incompatible
with life and babies are stillborn with features
similar to those of severe beta-thalassaemia.
Women at risk who wish to bear a child areidentified on the basis of racial and geographical
origin and personal or family history and are
usually offered antenatal diagnosis. If they carry a
genetic abnormality, and their partner also carriesthalassaemia
genes,
the
mother
is
normally
referred for fetal genetic diagnosis, and offeredtermination
of
the
pregnancy
if
the
fetus
is
severely affected.Sickle-cell syndromes
These inherited Hb defects affect people mostly
in central Africa (25% population carriage of the
defective gene) and parts of the Middle East andIndia. Afro-Caribbeans are commonly affected.
There is often co-inheritance of the sickle cell
gene with those for beta-thalassaemia and other
abnormal Hb conditions. The condition may behomozygous, giving HbSS and causing sickle-
cell anaemia, or heterozygous (HbAS), causing
sickle-cell trait.
The deoxygenated HbS is insoluble, and poly-merizes in the RBC. This is initially reversible, but the cells finally take on their characteristic, rigid sickle shape. These cannot negotiate the microcirculation and there is clotting and tissue infarction,
often
in
the
bones.
Because
HbS releases its oxygen more readily than normal Hb, patients usually feel well, but a sickling crisis may be triggered by hypoxia.
The heterozygous condition (HbAS) is initiallymild, because infants produce fetal Hb (HbF) for
3-6 months. Symptoms then become apparent,
due to a change from producing HbF to HbS, in
place of the normal HbA. High levels of HbFtend
to
prevent
sickling
and
many
Middle
Easternand
Asian
people
co-inherit
increased
HbF
levels
and
have
relatively
mild
disease
becausefetal
Hbisamoreefficientoxygencarrier than HbA.
Complications are the result of anaemia and
circulatory impairment. Although patients are
often generally well, they suffer chronic anaemiaand repeated painful sickling crises, caused by a
variety of stressors, e.g. infection, dehydration,
acidosis,
exposure
to
cold
and
anaesthetics.
Crises cause severe pain and opioid analgesics
(see Chapter 7) may be required. Special care is needed if anaesthesia is contemplated.
Renalimpairment
is
common
in
late
stage
disease and may progress to renal failure. Infec-
tions,especially
pneumococcal
disease,
are
common and need immunization and prophy-
lactic antibiotics. Aseptic bone necrosis, Salmo-nella
osteomyelitis
and
chronic
leg
ulceration
occur. Pulmonary hypertension occurs, due toRBC sequestration in the lungs and ischaemic
liver cirrhosis, and a severe pulmonary syndrome
may occur. Excess bilirubin production causes
pigment gallstones (see Chapter 3). Strokes arerelatively common.
Between crises, patients require regular folic
acid and prompt treatment of infections. Crises
that cannot be managed with analgesics requirehospital admission. Blood transfusion is required
only if their Hb level falls significantly below
their norm. Transfusion also aborts a sickling
crisis if the proportion of sickle cells is reduced toless than about 30%. Exchange tranfusion, i.e.
withdrawal of the same volume of the patient’s
blood as is transfused, may be required to avoid
excessiveblood
viscosity
and
so
reduced
microvascular blood flow, especially in severe
pulmonary involvement.Autoimmune
haemolytic
anaemias
are described on p. 723.
Microcytic, hypochromic anaemiasThe RBCs have a MCV of
78 fL due to some
disturbance of iron metabolism, and there is alow MCV/MCH ratio. Following this observa-
tion,examination
ofthebloodfilmusuallypermits rapid diagnosis. Figure 11.3 presents an
algorithm for the investigation and diagnosis of
this condition.
There may be:•
Iron deficiency.
•Impaired availability of iron, in the anaemia
of chronic disease.
•Defective
globinchainsynthesisinthalassaemias.
•Defective
haem
synthesis
in
sideroblastic
anaemia.
Indicators of iron status in anaemias are shown in Table 11.5.
Iron deficiency anaemia
It will be seen from Table 11.5 that the ferritinlevel
distinguishes
between
simple
iron
defi-
ciencyand
the
anaemia
of
chronic
disease.
Ferritin is a soluble form of storage iron that is a
good index of total body iron level. Examinationof
a
stained
blood
marrow
film
is
conclusive
ifthere
is
any
doubt.
Determination
of
the
percentage of transferrin saturation may also be
useful.Anaemia
of
chronic
disease.
A
low-grade
anaemia is common in chronic inflammatorystates, e.g. RA and the connective tissue diseases (see Chapter 12), chronic infections, e.g. tuber-
cular osteomyelitis and some fungal infections, and thalassaemia trait (see above).
Sideroblastic
anaemia
is
due
to
abnormal
bone marrow stem cells and may be inherited.
Because it is X-linked, it is transmitted through
the female line. There is defective haem synthesisand characteristic cells in the bone marrow show
a ring of iron deposits (ring sideroblasts). The
acquired form may be caused by toxins, including
drugs,e.g.
alcohol
abuse,
isoniazid
and
lead
toxicity. The anaemia may be severe and refrac-
tory to treatment. There is usually a bimodaldistribution of RBC size, with both microcytic
and mildly macrocytic cells. Patients with gener-
ally
poor
production
of
all
cell
types
(pancy-
topenia) have a poor prognosis and may progress
to acute myeloblastic leukaemia (AML).
The thalassaemias are described above.Macrocytic anaemias
Classification, aetiology and diagnosis
There are megaloblastic, non-megaloblastic and haemolytic types.
Megaloblasticmacrocytic
anaemias
result
from impaired DNA synthesis and nuclear matu-
ration.RNA
and
protein
synthesis
continues
after nuclear development has ceased, causing a
relatively large immature RBC with a high cyto-plasmic mass (megaloblasts). Megaloblasts can
be observed in bone marrow smears as unusually
large RBC progenitor cells with dispersed nuclear
chromatinand
several
nucleoli.
Because
the
factors
causing
defective
erythropoiesis
also
affect all other bone marrow cell lines, thrombo-
cytopenia and leucopenia also occur, usually in
the later stages. Characteristic large leucocytesmay also occur.
Non-megaloblasticmacrocytic
anaemiasareusually due to toxic agents, non-bone marrow
organ failure, e.g. alcoholic liver disease and hypothyroidism,or
aplasticanaemias(bone marrowfailure;seebelow). RBCagglutina-tion
produces
large
clumps
of
cells
that
may be
reported
erroneously
as
macrocytosis
by automated blood analysers.
Megaloblasticmacrocytic
anaemias
may
be due to:
•
Deficiency
of
vitamin
B12
or
folic
acid
(Table11.6 and Figure 11.4), or abnormal
metabolism of these.
•Therapy
withdrugsinterferingwithDNAsynthesis, e.g. azathioprine, cytarabine, cyclo-
phosphamide,fluorouracil,
hydroxycarbmide,
mercaptopurine,
tioguanine
and
zidovudine.
Aciclovirand
ganciclovirmayalsocause megaloblastosis.•
Deficiency
of
enzymes
essential
for
DNA
synthesis.
Diagnosis and aetiology
Ascheme
for
the
diagnosis
of
macrocytic anaemia is given in Figure 11.5.
Because reticulocytes are larger than normal
RBCs, any situation causing significant bloodloss, e.g. trauma or haemolysis, will result in the
release of reticulocytes from the bone marrow,
causing a reticulocytosis and macrocytosis, at least in the short term, until treatment corrects the abnormalities.
Deficiencies of vitamin B12or folic acid are
usually
of
dietary
origin,
e.g.
strict
vegans,
malnutrition,gastrointestinal
problems (e.g.malabsorption, see Chapter 3), excessive alcohol
intake,medication
history,gastriccarcinomaand
gastrointestinal
surgery.
These
potential
causes need to be investigated. Hypothyroidismmay be associated with pernicious anaemia and
smoking may also cause vitamin B12 deficiency.
Folate
deficiency
occurs
in
malabsorption,
pregnancy, neoplastic diseases associated with a
high cell turnover, including severe infections.
Antifolatemedication,
e.g.
methotrexate
and
trimethoprim, anticonvulsants, e.g. phenobarbital,
phenytoinand
primidone,
causing
increased
demand, and loss of folic acid in peritoneal dial-
ysis and haemodialysis (see Chapter 14) may alsocontribute to low blood folate levels. An acute
onset may occur in those with marginal folate
stores.
Heavy menstrual losses in women and haemo-lytic anaemias (see above) also cause deficiencies.
Clearly, assays for vitamin B12and tests to
establish the reasons for low levels are required, e.g.
absorption
tests (Schilling
test
and
anti-
bodiesto
parietal
cells,
intrinsic
factor
and thyroid tissue), and establishment of the origin of folate deficiency are required.
Macrocytosis occurring with a normal RDW usually
indicates
heavy
alcohol
consumption and this is confirmed by a high serum level of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), a marker of liver damage.
Management of anaemias
This must be based on specific therapy and thus
depends on accurate diagnosis. Effective treat-ment
should
give
an
increased
reticulocyte
count within 10 days. If this response does notoccur, or if the Hb level does not improve, the
diagnosis should be reviewed. Clearly, if anaemia
is due to an underlying disease state, e.g. the
anaemiaof
chronic
disease,
treatment
must
involve
correction
of
that
condition,
in
addi-
tion to the application of appropriate specific
therapy.
Blood transfusion may be indicated if therehas been a sudden fall in the erythrocyte count
orHb
concentration,e.g.inacutedrug-orinfection-induced
haemolytic
crises
in
G6PD
and pyruvate kinase deficiency (see Figure 11.1and pp. 713 and 714) and inherited RBC disor-
ders. It is also the mainstay of treatment in
thalassaemias
and
in
sickle-cell
disease (see
above).Transfusion
ishazardousinelderlypatients
because
the
rapid
increase
in
blood
volumeraises
the
blood
pressure
and
this,
together with the associated increase in venous
return stresses the heart. Both of these are unde-sirable in those with compromised cardiac func-
Anaemia721
tion (see Chapter 4). Cardiac stress is also caused
if the recipient’s cell count is near normal, due to
increased blood viscosity. Further, the procedure
carries the risks of infection and immunologicalerrors, despite rigorous protocols. Repeated tran-
fusionsof
wholebloodcausetransfusionhaemosiderosis (iron
overload),
with
liver,
pancreas,heart
muscle
and
endocrine
gland
damage. This usually requires treatment with the
iron-chelating agent desferrioxamine (see above).The alternative, orally active chelating agent
deferiprone is licensed for use in patients with
thalassaemia major (see above) in whom desfer-
rioxamine is contra-indicated, or are intolerantof
it.
However,
it
may
cause
serious
blood
dyscrasias.Erythropoietin
Darbepoetin and erythropoietin alfa and beta are
useful only in the anaemia of chronic disease,
especially renal disease, notably those on dialysis(see Chapter 14), and in those receiving cancer
chemotherapy (see Chapter 10). They are also
used in patients with moderate anaemia, i.e. Hb
10-13 g/dL,who
are
awaiting
major
surgery
likely
to
involve
major
blood
loss,
e.g.
hip
replacement, to minimize the need for blood
transfusion.
Iron therapyIron deficiency is often difficult to treat. The
preferred treatment is to use ferrous sulphate
tablets (1 tablet
65 mg Fe2
), one before break-
fast, because it is better absorbed on an empty
stomach. Further, diets that include bran, muesli
or wholemeal bread contain phytates, which mayinterfere with iron absorption. Twice-daily dosing
may be needed if there is continuing blood loss,
but the commonly prescribed three times daily
regimen is usually excessive and is needed onlyrarely. However, iron may cause gastrointestinal
side-effects (see below) that cause patient non-
adherence, so after-meal dosing may have to be
accepted.Ferrous fumarate may be a suitable alternative if a patient is intolerant of ferrous sulphate and the 200-mg tablet provides the same amount of iron as a ferrous sulphate
tablet. There are several liquid dosage forms that are suitable for infants and young children.
Treatment is continued for 2-4 months after the Hb level has been normalized, to replenish iron stores.Injections
of
iron
dextran
or
iron
sucrose
are
rarely required, but may be needed if a patientis intolerant of oral iron, and if there is malab-
sorption (see Chapter 3) or continuing bleeding.
There is no good evidence to support the use of
slow-release
or
compound
oral
products. Although they are less likely to cause gastro-
intestinal upset, this is possibly because only a small proportion of the dose is absorbed.
Iron and folic acid tablets are given prophy-
lacticallyto
pregnant
women
at
risk
of
the
combined deficiency. However, the amount of
folic acid in these is too low for the preventionof neural tube defects in the fetus (see below)
and for the treatment of megaloblastic anaemia.
Tolerability is the determining factor in the
choice of product. Nausea and epigastric painare common and are dose-related, but this does
not seem to hold for diarrhoea or constipation,
though
dose
reduction
may
help.
Ferrous
gluconatetablets
containing 35 mgFe2,i.e.about
half
the
amount
in
ferrous
sulphate
tablets, or one of the liquid preparations, will beneeded for this. Oral iron may exacerbate diar-
rhoea in patients with IBD (see Chapter 3) and
this
occurs
more
commonly
with
modified-
release forms that are released lower in the GIT.
Also,
care
must
be
exercised
in
those
with
bowelstricture (narrowing)
anddiverticulardisease (see
Chapter
3).
Constipation
is
espe-
cially likely in older patients and may lead tofaecal impaction.
Correction of vitamin B12 and folate deficiencies
Vitamin
B12
deficiency.
Hydroxocobalamin
is
given intramuscularly, 1 mg on alternate days for
5-6 doses
to
replenish
normal
body
stores,
mainly in the liver, of 3-5 mg. An alternative
regimen is to give the 1-mg dose on 3 days a week
for 2-3 weeks. Because daily losses are normallyvery small, this is sufficient to maintain require-
mentsfor
2-4 years’normalmetabolism.Dueto the long persistence of hydroxocobalamin, a
maintenance dose of 1 mg is then given every
2-3 months, usually for life. Clinical improve-
ment is rapid ( 48 h) and a maximal reticulocyteresponse
occurs
in
about
7 days.
However,
existing long-standing CNS damage, a result of vitamin B12 deficiency, is irreversible.Cyanocobalamin is no longer used because it
is excreted more rapidly than hydroxocobalamin
and
requires
monthly
injections.
It
is
now
known that giving a 2-mg dose PO daily is also
effective,
but
only
50-lg
tablets
are
available.
Theuse
oflow-doseoralpreparationsasa‘tonic’ is irrational. However, they are prescrib-
able under the UK NHS for vegans and others
with a dietary deficiency, both for prevention
andtreatment
of
vitamin
B12
deficiency,
though
this
is
inferior
to
hydroxocobalamin
treatment.
Isolated
folate
deficiency
should
not
be
correctedunless
vitaminB12 levelsareadequate,
because
the
latter
is
essential
for
correctfolate
metabolism
and
giving
folate
makes
extra
demands
for
vitamin
B12 (see
Figure 11.5). This may produce frank vitamin
B12
deficiency
in
a
patient
with
a
marginal vitamin B12
level and so may cause widespread neurological damage. For this reason, multivit-
amin products, e.g. vitamins capsules, do not
contain folic acid. Low levels of vitamin B12 also prevent full folate metabolism, so the folic acid is not available for normal purposes. If folate
needs to be given and the patient’s vitamin B12 statusis
suspect
or
unknown,
both
folic
acid and vitamin B12
should be given.
The normal therapeutic dose is 5 mg of folic
aciddaily,
the
same
as
is
used
in
chronic
haemolytic disease. Women trying to conceive
should take a prophylactic dose of 200-400 lgdaily, or 400-500 lg daily for those at risk of a
first neural tube defect, e.g. if either wife or
husband
has
a
neural
tube
defect.
However,
4-5 mg daily until the 12th week of pregnancy is
needed to prevent a recurrence of a neural tube
defect.Folic
acid
may
reduce
the
plasma
concen-
trationsof
antiepileptics (see
Chapter 6),
i.e. phenytoin, phenobarbital and primidone.
Acquired haemolytic anaemias
Inherited haemolytic anaemias, including those due to congenital metabolic defects, are discussed on pp. 712-716.Non-immune haemolytic anaemias
Theseare
onetypeofacquiredhaemolyticanaemia.
There
are
numerous
non-immune
causes of intravascular haemolysis, for example:•
Mechanical RBC damage caused by excessive
turbulence or shear in the circulation:
-
Calcified
heart
valve
stenosis
and
mal-
functioning mechanical heart valves (seeChapter 4).
-Martial arts or prolonged running, which
damage RBCs in the circulation of the feet.
-Microangiopathic
haemolytic
anaemia,
caused
by
severe
hypertension
(see Chapter 4).
-Infection, e.g. disseminated intravascular
coagulation (see Chapter 2).
-Inflammatory conditions, e.g. polyarteritis
nodosa (see Chapter 13).
•Paroxysmal
nocturnalhaemoglobinuriaisdue to a rare RBC membrane defect causing
extremesensitivity
to
complement
C3
(Chapter 2).
As
the
name
implies,
the
haemoglobinuria is increased during sleep.
These
non-immune
causes
of
intravascular
haemolysis are not discussed further in this text.
However, most haemolysis is extravascular and
results from RBC destruction in the phagocyticcells of the reticuloendothelial system in the
liver, bone marrow and, especially, the spleen. If
the bone marrow is able to respond, so that RBC
replacement is able to keep pace with destruc-tion, i.e. there is compensated haemolysis; the
condition does not require treatment. Pharma-
cotherapeutic or surgical intervention is appro-
priate only if the condition causes respiratory orcardiovascular limitation or there is a serious
underlying condition.
Autoimmune haemolytic anaemias
These are due to the production of anti-RBCautoimmunoglobulins (auto-Igs;
Chapter 2).
They are detected by a positive direct Coomb’stest (Figure 11.6) and can be divided into two
types. That in which the reaction with the auto-
Igs occurs strongly at body temperature is the
‘warm’ type and is due to IgG autoagglutinins.Reactions that occur below 37°C (often
30°C)
characterizes the ‘cold’ type and involve IgMautoagglutinins (Table 11.7; see Chapter 2).
Anaemia723
The distinction is important because it affects
management. The cold type responds poorly to
treatment (see below), and patients with cold-
type disease develop symptoms only in a coldenvironment.
Pathology.No primary pathogenic aetiology has been identified for either condition, but
associated diseases are listed in Table 11.7.
Autoagglutinins(IGMs)
thatactivatethecomplement
cascade (see
Chapter 2)
cause
intravascular haemolysis. However, IgGs often donot activate complement, but cells coated with
IgG autoagglutinins may be either completely
phagocytosed in the spleen or their cytoskeleton
is damaged so that they become spherical (sphe-rocytes) and continue to circulate until they too
are trapped in the spleen and phagocytosed. Thus
IgG autoagglutinins usually cause extravascular
haemolysis.Investigation.
Results
with
electronic
analy-
sers usually give spuriously low RBC and Hb levels and a high MCV, all of these being due to RBC agglutination. Results with the cold type usually revert to approximate normality if the sample is warmed.The
warm
type
gives
nearly
normal results in usual laboratory conditions. However, agglutination
is
best
observed
by
microscopy, which also shows spherocytes.
Anaemia is usually mild,
7.5 g/dL of Hb, but severe haemolysis may occur rarely.
Clinicalfeatures
-warmtypehaemolyticanaemias.
These are more frequent in middle-
aged women than men, but otherwise can occurin both sexes at any age. They tend to follow a
relapsing-remitting course, but folate deficiency
and infections may cause severe haemolysis. The
commonest associations are with drugs that actas haptens (see Chapter 2), e.g. methyldopa and
penicillins, and rheumatic and related diseases
(Table 11.7; see also Chapter 12). Lymphomas,
e.g.Hodgkin’s
disease
and
non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma, and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia
(see Chapter 10) are also associated. Autoagglu-tinins against Rhesus antigens (see Chapter 2)
may be present. The spleen is enlarged propor-
tionately to the severity of the haemolysis and is
palpable below the left rib cage.Management.
Any underlying disease should be treated and alternatives used to replace any drugs that are implicated, but haemolysis may continue for more than 3 weeks even though the drug is completely eliminated.
Patients should not normally receive bloodtransfusions, because autoagglutinins are wide-
spreadin
donorserum,andcarefulcross-matching at 37°C is required if transfusion is
essential. Washed red cells carry very little donor
serum, but cross-matching of donor RBCs with
the recipient’s serum is essential to avoid lysis ofdonor RBCs.
High-doseprednisolone
is effective in about80% of patients and reduces the production of
autoagglutinins, by suppressing B and T cell
activity. It may also suppress RBC destruction in
the spleen. If there is no response, or if relapseoccurs when the dose is reduced, splenectomy is
required. However, even this may be inadequate
and immunosuppression, e.g. with azathioprine
or cyclophosphamide(see Chapter 10), is then
required.
Clinicalfeatures
-
cold
type
haemolytic
anaemias.
In about 50% of patients no cause
can be found, especially in the older age group.
This form is usually associated with a gradual
onsetof
chronic
haemolysis.
Infections,
e.g.
infectious
mononucleosis
(‘glandular
fever’,
due to Epstein-Barr virus), Mycoplasma pneumo-
nias,
and
cytomegalovirus
infections
are
the
commonest cause in the remainder, with an
acute
presentation.
This
latter
form
may
be
severe. Acrocyanosis, e.g. Raynaud’s phenom-
enon (see Chapter 12) and similar blanching of
the skin in the feet, occurs in cold conditions.Management.
Apart from treating any associ-
ated conditions, e.g. infections, and avoidance of cold conditions, little can be done. None of the treatments used for warm type disease, i.e. pred-nisolone, splenectomy and immunosuppression, is usually effective.
Neutropenia and agranulocytosis
Neutropenia
is
defined
as
a
neutrophil
count
1.5 ÷ 109/L. An almost complete absence ofNeutropenia and agranulocytosis
725
neutrophilsis
agranulocytosis,
because
they form about 85% of the total granulocyte count, i.e. neutrophils, eosinophils and basophils, and the factors that underlie neutropenia also affect other granulocytes.
Aetiology
•Inherited:
ethnic
(more
common
in
non-
white races), numerous rare inherited defects.
•Treatment of neoplastic disease with cytotoxic
drugs (see Chapter 10).
•Following stem cell transplantation.
•
Aplastic anaemia, i.e. bone marrow failure,
which may be:
-
congenital;
-due to drugs or chemicals, e.g. penicillins,
cephalosporins, chloramphenicol, gold salts,
antiepileptics(phenytoin,
carbamazepine), oral
hypoglycaemic
agents,
NSAIDs, quinine,
volatile
aromatic
hydrocarbons (‘glue sniffing’);
-
result of infections, e.g. Epstein-Barr virus,
hepatitis, HIV/AIDS, TB, typhoid fever;-
due
to
bone
marrow
infiltration
with
neoplasticcells,
e.g.
in
leukaemias
and lymphomas.
•
Megaloblastic anaemia (see above).
• RA, Felty’s syndrome, SLE, Sjögren’s syndrome
(see Chapter 12).
Symptoms
These are primarily infections that increase in frequency and severity as the neutrophil count falls. Below 0.5 ÷ 109/L life-threatening pneu-
monia and septicaemia are likely. Chronic tired-ness may be regarded as a minor condition, thus delaying diagnosis and treatment.
Childrenare
usuallydiagnosedatabout 4-6 months of age, but the course of the disease isfairlybenignandinmostcasesremitsspontaneously after 6-24 months.
Diagnosis
This
depends
on
a
low
neutrophil
count,
examinationof
abonemarrowtrephine, demonstration of antineutrophil antibodies andthe detection of other autoimmune conditions.
Pharmacotherapy
Any implicated drugs should be stopped and
associated conditions treated. Prompt treatment ofinfections
with
parenteral
broad-spectrum antibiotics, e.g. ceftazidime plus gentamicin, plus flucloxacillin if Staph. aureus is suspected. This may be modified according to local guidelines and
re-evaluated
according
to
the
patient’s progress and laboratory guidance.
Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (rhG-
CSF), i.e. filgrastim, pegfilgrastim (increased dura-tion of action) or lenograstim, may help in a
severe infection that is responding poorly to
antibiotics. Like other new biological agents it
shouldbe
used
under
specialist
supervision,
because
it
can
have
serious
side-effects,
e.g.
malaise, bone and muscle pain, exacerbation of
arthritis, sudden onset of severe agranulocytosis,
urinary abnormalities, hepatic enlargement andspleen enlargement with a risk of spleen rupture.
Immunosuppressive agents, e.g. azathioprine,
cyclophosphamide, ciclosporin and antilymphocyte
globulin, if the condition has an autoimmunebasis.
Corticosteroids are a second-line option because the response to them is very variable and they increase the risk of fungal and viral infection.
Haemostasis, fibrinolysis and anticoagulation
Haemostasis is a vitally important and highlyorganized and regulated homeostatic mechanism.
Its function is to secure the optimal flow of blood
to organs and cells under physiological condi-
tions and to respond rapidly to disturbances, e.g.bleeding caused by tissue damage, and restore
normality. There are four major components that
co-operate sensitively to achieve this result:
•Vascular endothelium and intima. •
Platelets.
•
Components of the coagulation system. •
Fibrinolytic system.
Commoninvestigations
intotheclottingcascade are given in Table 11.8.
Vascular endothelium and intima
The endothelium (see Chapter 4) is much more
than an elegant smooth inner lining of thevessel wall that separates the blood from reactive
components of the intima and minimizes turbu-
lence in the blood, though it does both of these.
In the following discussion, the locations andfunctions of individual components of the clot-
ting and thrombolytic pathways are described
first and these are then drawn together when the
clotting cascade is described.Under normal conditions, it prevents throm-
bosis (clotting),partly
byrepellingcellularcomponents of the blood by its surface charge. It
also has direct anticoagulant properties due to:
•
Production
of
nitric
oxide,
which
inhibits
platelet adhesion and aggregation and causesvasodilatation,
thus
maintaining
a
patent blood vessel.
•Production
of
epoprostenol
(prostacyclin),
which
inhibits
platelet
aggregation,
also
preventing vascular blockage.
•
Presence of heparan and dermatan sulphates,
which are direct anticoagulants.•
Exoenzymes that break down platelet activa-
tors, e.g. ADP.
•
Thrombomodulin on the surface provides a
high affinity, specific thrombin binding siteand the thrombomodulin-thrombin complex activates protein C 1000-fold (PrCa). PrCa acts as an anticoagulant.
When the endothelium is damaged:
•
Tissue factor (TFr) is exposed and remains
located at the site of damage.•
Von Willebrand factor (vWF) in the plasma
binds collagen and platelets together via their
GP1b binding sites or collagen binds platelets via their GP1a binding site.
•Reduced thrombomodulin production results
in less PrCa, which gives reduced anticoagu-
lantactivity
tolimitthrombingeneration,and
so
prevents
runaway
coagulation.
Protein S acts to bind PrCa to the endothelialsurface.
•Tissue type plasminogen activator inhibitor
is released, which blocks activation of tissue
plasminogen, thus preventing clot lysis and maintaining clot stability.Platelets
Theseare
derivedfromthe(myeloid)mega-karyocytes and are an essential component of
haemostasis. They are normally confined to the
vascular lumen by a mutually-repulsive static
charge between them and the vascular endothe-lium, by the production of nitric oxide and
epoprostenol by the endothelial cells and the
high-velocity laminar flow in the core of the
lumen.However,
when
the
endothelium
is
damaged,
vWFr
is
exposed
and
binds
the
platelets to collagen, even under conditions of
high
flow.
However,
this
binding
is
not
permanent and the platelets dissociate and roll
slowly along the endothelium. In this situation
the platelets become activated and the plateletGpIIb-IIIa receptors bind both the vWFr and
fibrinogen,platelet
adhesionbecomesirre-versible
and
aggregation
occurs,
resulting
in
propagationof
the
primary
clot.
When
flow
is
reduced,
fibrinogen,
fibronectin (a
large
glycoproteinadhesion
molecule)andcollagenmay
initiate
platelet
adhesion
without
the
intervention of vWFr.Von
Willebrand’s
disease
(p.
731)
is
an
autosomal-dominant condition, causing either adeficiency or an abnormal function of vWFr.
Platelet activation
This is caused by the binding of arachidonic acid,
thromboxane A2, ADP, fibrinogen and collagen.The level of cAMP is reduced and phopholipase C
is activated. The phopholipase generates inositol
triphosphate,
which
mobilizes
calcium,
trig-
gering several calcium-dependent reactions, e.g.
secretion of the contents of platelet granules.
Activation is accompanied by morphological change, the platelets become spherical with large pseudopodia,followed
by
contraction
of
the cytoskeleton, clot shrinkage and platelet plug
formation (see Chapter 2).
Platelet dysfunctionIt is unsurprising from the central role of platelets in clotting that a deficiency of them, i.e. throm-
bocytopenia ( 100 ÷ 109/L, normal 100-500 ÷ 109/L), will lead to bleeding problems, e.g.
•
Moderate haemorrhage after injury.
•Purpura, i.e. spontaneous bleeding into the
skin, usually in the form of a petechial rash, caused
by
numerous
small
bleeds,
which occurs at platelet counts of 20-50 ÷ 109/L (N 150-400 ÷ 109/L). This type of rash does not blanch under pressure, unlike inflammatory rashes, and also accompanies meningococcal meningitis (see Chapter 8).
•Easy bruising, epistaxis
(nose bleeds), con-
junctival haemorrhage, blood blisters in the
mouthand
blood
oozing
from
gums
and menorrhagia (heavy periods).
•
In severe disease (
20 ÷ 109/L) there may be
brain and retinal haemorrhage.
Thrombocytopenia may be due to:
•Inherited abnormalities of platelet function,
e.g. von Willebrand’s disease (see above).
•Reduced platelet production, e.g. infiltration
of
the
bone
marrow
in
leukaemias
and
lymphomas. Gaucher’s disease is a lysosomal
storage disease, due to abnormal lipid metab-
olism, in which large amounts of lipoids aredeposited in bone marrow and spleen cells,
causingsplenomegaly
andsoexcessiveplatelet destruction. It is particularly common
inJews
ofEasternEuropeanorigin (1in2000-3000 live births).
• Excessive peripheral destruction, due to, e.g.
-
Autoimmune platelet destruction, some-
times with drugs acting as haptens (seeChapter 2). It may also occur in neonates by
a
process
similar
to
that
causing haemolytic disease of the newborn (HDN; see Chapter 2).
-Heparin therapy (rarely; see below).
-
Non-immune platelet destruction, e.g. in
hypersplenism,with
orwithoutspleno-megaly, due
to
alcoholic
cirrhosis,
acute
and chronic infections, e.g. hepatitis (seeChapter 3), pregnancy, renal failure, endo-
carditis (seeChapters 4 and
8),malariaand syphilis, and systemic inflammatory
diseases,e.g.
SLE,RAandSjögren’ssyndrome (see Chapter 12).
Other causes may be drugs, e.g. cephalo-
sporins,
penicillins,
quinine,
ciclosporin, mitomycin.
Management of thrombocytopenia includes:
•
Stop any drugs that may be implicated.
•Diagnose and treat any underlying or associ-
ated diseases, e.g. H. pylori infection, hepatitis
C,cytomegalovirus
andHIVinfections.Treatment of Gaucher’s disease may include
high-dose steroids, infusion of alglucerase and
splenectomy.
•High-dose
prednisolone,
i.e.
1 mg/kg/day
for
4 weeks, reducing slowly to zero if possible.
About 70% of patients respond, about half ofwhom have a long-lasting remission. High-
dosepulsed
dexamethasonehasalsobeenused.
• Immunosuppressive agents may help in refrac-
tory disease, e.g. azathioprine, mycophenolate
mofetil, ciclosporin, danazol and vincristine.
• Alemtuzumab or rituximab (unlicensed indica-
tions) are monoclonal antibodies, given by IVinfusion, that cause lysis of B-lymphocytes.
Theymay
helpinpatientswithrefractoryautoimmune disease. Although rituximab has
beenused
withminimalside-effects,theseagents
may
cause
severe
anaphylaxis (see
Chapter 2) and should be used under specialistsupervision
with
full
resuscitation
facilities
available.•
Splenectomy is used as a last resort, espe-
cially in the elderly who may be unfit formajor surgery, but this exposes the patient to recurrent severe infections.
• Children are treated only if there is significant
bleeding. Prednisolone is the first-line therapy
(see above). Chronic disease requires long-
term steroids (with the risk of growth retarda-
tion), IV Ig, or ultimately splenectomy, with a life-long risk of infection. Treatment clearly poses considerable problems.IV immunoglobulin (IV Ig) gives a prompt but
temporary (3-week) increase in the platelet count.
It is therefore used only in the acute treatment
ofserious
haemorrhage,
usually
with
cortico-
steroids, or to increase the count prior to splenec-
tomy, and so prevent intra-operative bleeding.There is a risk of unsuspected viral transmission.
Platelet transfusions are not usually beneficial, because they are destroyed rapidly. However, they are used acutely to control life-threatening bleeding, e.g. brain haemorrhage.
Antiplatelet agents
Most anticoagulants affect the venous circula-tion and have little effect on clotting in the
arteries. Antiplatelet agents reduce platelet aggre-
gation and may inhibit thrombus formation in
the arteries, and so are beneficial in those condi-tions in which arterial thrombosis is the prime
cause, e.g. MI (see Chapter 4) and some strokes.
They are also useful in embolic diseases, i.e.
vascular blockage caused by clots or clot frag-fibrinolysis and anticoagulation
729
ments, e.g. pulmonary embolism (PE), retinal vein occlusion and some strokes.Aspirin
This is readily hydrolysed at blood pH (7.4) to
release acetic acid. Aspirin irreversibly acetylates
a serine residue near the active centre of plateletcyclo-oxygenase (COX) and therefore prevents
the formation of thromboxane (TX A2), a vaso-
constrictor and potent initiator of platelet acti-
vation.Because
platelets
have
no
synthetic
ability, the effect is permanent as long as aspirin
is being taken.For the secondary prevention of thrombotic
IHD and stroke, 150-300 mg is given as soon as
possible
after
the
initial
event
and
this
is
followed by 75 mg daily (low-dose) for lifelong
maintenance.
The use of low-dose aspirin for primary preven-tion is appropriate only in those in whom the
estimated 10-year risk of CVD and stroke, non-
fatal
and
fatal,
is
20%
(see
BNF
and
the
References and further reading section), provided
that any hypertension is controlled adequately.
Inthe
remainder,
the
possible
benefit
is
outweighed
by
the
potential
side-effects,
e.g.
gastrointestinal bleeding. Other uses are in atrial
fibrillation,
provided
there
are
no
other
risk
factorsfor
stroke,anginapectoris (AP)andintermittent claudication (cramping pain in the
legs due to ischaemia, induced by exercise and
relieved by rest).
Glycoprotein IIb-IIIa ihibitors: abciximabThis monoclonal antibody to GpIIb-IIIa recep-
tors on platelets is used as an adjunct to heparin andaspirin
forthepreventionofischaemic complications in high-risk patients:•
Those undergoing percutaneous transluminal
coronary
intervention (PTCI),
e.g.
angiog-
raphy or angioplasty (see Chapter 4).
•Those with unstable angina pectoris (AP) for
the prevention of MI in those scheduled for PTCI. An IV injection is given initially, followed by an IV infusion started 10-60 min before the procedure and continuing for 12 h.
Itshould
be
used
only
once
during
the
procedure
because
the
serious
side-effect
of
bleeding, possibly complicated by hypotension,
bradycardia, chest pain, fever, thrombocytopenia and hypersensitivity reactions, are enhanced by repeat dosing.
It is contra-indicated if the patient already hasactive
bleeding,
a
bleeding
tendency,
or
thrombocytopenia,has
had
major
surgery,
intracranial or intraspinal surgery or trauma in
the previous 2 months, stroke within 2 years,an
intracranial
neoplasm,
arteriovenous
mal-
formation,aneurysm,
severe
hypertension
or
hypertensive retinopathy, or is breastfeeding.
In view of this long list of potential hazards, it is not surprising that it must be used underspecialist supervision.
In 2002 NICE published guidance on the use of GpIIb-IIIa inhibitors for ACS (Table 11.9).
Glycoprotein IIb-IIIa ihibitors: eptifibatide and tirofiban
Theseare
licensed
for
use
with
aspirin
or
heparin to prevent MI in patients with unstable
AP, or those who have non-ST-segment eleva-tion
MI.
They
have
generally
similar
side-
effectsand
contra-indications
to
abciximab.
However,
eptifibatide
should
be
used
within
24 hof
thelastepisodeofchestpainand tirofibanwithin 12 h.Tirofibanmaycausea reversible thrombocytopenia.Both agents are given by IV infusion, under specialist supervision, but eptifibatide requires an initial IV loading dose.
Other antiplatelet agents
The thienopyridines, clopidogrel and ticlopidine,
havesimilar
actions,
contra-indications
and
side-effects. Ticlopidine is not licensed in the UK.
Clopidogrel is used as a prophylactic oral anti-coagulant in patients with a history of sympto-
matic ischaemic disease. It is also licensed for use
combined with low-dose aspirin in acute coro-
nary syndrome without ST-segment elevation(see Chapter 4). In the latter circumstances, the
combination is given for at least 1 month, but
not
usually
for
longer
than 9-12 months.
Readers are directed to the BNF for further details
of interactions, etc. Although clopidogrel should
be initiated only in hospital inpatients, severaltrials have reported it to be a safe and effective
alternative to aspirin.
Dipyridamole is used as an adjunct to other
oralanticoagulation
for
the
prevention
of
thromboembolism
associated
with
prosthetic
heartvalves.
Modified-releasepreparationsarelicensed
for
the
secondary
prophylaxis
of
ischaemicstroke
and
TIAs.
There
is
no
good
evidence for the benefits of its long-term use with
low-doseaspirin
in
the
prevention
of
serious
ischaemic cardiovascular events. However, there
is evidence from one trial that this combinationreduces
the
risk
for
non-fatal
stroke,
though
gastrointestinal side-effects were more trouble-some
and
more
people
withdrew
from
the
combination than from aspirin alone.Epoprostenol (prostacyclin) may be used in renal
dialysis patients, either alone or with heparin.
Because it is a potent vasodilator it causes flush-
ing, headaches and hypotension. Its half-life isonly about 3 min, so it has to be given by contin-
uous IV infusion, but with these patients it can be
added conveniently to the existing return dialysis
line.Clotting cascade
Haemostasis
This resembles the complement cascade in that
factors are split to form enzymes or factors withother activity (see Chapter 2) that act sequentially,
thus giving massive amplification of the initial
reaction. It has been conventional to consider the
clotting pathways as composed of two separateroutes, intrinsic and extrinsic, similar to the situa-
tion with complement. However, the two path-
ways are now known to be integrated in vivo,
forming a unified whole. A summary of these reac-tions is shown in Figure 11.7. Because there has
been confusion in nomenclature, most of the
various elements are now designated by roman
numerals,but
these
are
not
numbered
in
sequence. Activated forms are denoted by the
suffix ‘a’.Tissue factor (TFr) is a glycoprotein that is
expressed constitutively on fibroblast surfaces
and is inducible in endothelial and other cells by
IL-1, TNF and endotoxin, especially if the cellsare damaged. It acts as a co-factor with Factor
VII (FrVII) to initiate the cascade. The FrVII-TFr
complex activates FrIX and FrX, forming FrIXa
andFrXa.
The
latter
acts
with
FrVa
to
form
the tenase complex (FrXa-FrVa) that converts
prothrombin to thrombin, in association withphospholipid and Ca2
. Thrombin has the key
role in the process and converts:•
FrV →
FrVa, to generate additional tenase
complex.
•
Fibrinogen → fibrin.
•FrXIII → FrXIIIa, which in turn crosslinks the
fibrin fibres, forming a stable clot matrix.
•FrXI → FrXIa, which then converts FrIX →
FrIXa and FrVIII → FrVIIIa. The FrVIIIa-FrIXa
complex converts FrX → FrXa, providing anfibrinolysis and anticoagulation
731
additional source for the tenase complex that is required because it elicits the production of a tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFrPI) and inactivates FrVIIa-TFr. The TFrPI is one of the componentsthat
serves
to
limit
excessive coagulation. The conversion of FrXI → FrXIa may also occur by auto-activation.
FrVIIa is known to bind to platelets indepen-
dently of TFr and causes the release of thrombinat sites of vascular injury. Although there have
been only a few randomized trials, recombinant
FrVIIa has been reported to be effective in the
management of haemorrhage due to trauma orsurgery, e.g. upper gastrointestinal bleeding (see
Chapter3),
livertransplantsandacuteintra-cerebral haemorrhage, but these are unlicensed
indications.In
thelattercase,itproducedimproved
outcome
and
reduced
mortality.
It
ispresently
licensed
for
the
treatment
of
haemophilia (see below) and inherited disorders
of platelet function.Inherited coagulation disorders: haemophilias and von Willebrand disease
The haemophilias are X-linked genetic disorders
of haemostasis that are due to deficiencies of
coagulation factors. There are two forms: themost common is due to a deficiency of FrVIII:C,
its procoagulant form, which circulates in the
plasma in association with vWFr (see above) and
causes haemophilia A. FrIX deficiency causeshaemophilia B. Because the conditions are X-
linked all affected women are carriers and their
sons have a 50% chance of haemophilia and
daughtershave
a 50%
chance
of
being
a
carrier. However, it is estimated that up to one-
third of mutations in the FrVIII gene may bespontaneous and so not inherited from a parent.
Because almost all haemophiliacs are male, and
the defective gene is X-linked, all of their daugh-
ters are carriers but all of their sons are normal,unless the mother is a carrier. A very small
number of women are haemophiliacs, due to
inactivation of the normal chromosomal allele, a
process known as lyonization, very early inembryo development.
The prevalence of haemophilia A is about 1 per 5000-10 000 and haemophilia B is about
one-fifth as common.
The FrVIII gene is very large (186 kilobases) andnumerous mutations have been identified that
may produce a range of levels of functionality,
the normal range of FrVIII level being 50-200%
of the mean. The FrIX gene is much smaller (33kilobases) and is inherited similarly to FrVIII,
though recessive forms also occur. Some muta-
tions give rise to the ‘Leyden’ phenotype that
disappears after puberty.Deficiency of vWFr, the functions of which are
describedon
p. 726,alsocausesableedingtendency that may vary from mild to severe.
Theyare
muchmorecommonthanthehaemophilias and the prevalence of mild von
Willebrand disease (vWD) is estimated to reach
1% in some populations. This high frequency is
a reflection of its dual roles in FrVIII:C carriageand platelet binding to vascular endothelium.
There are three forms of vWD, the genes for
which are located on chromosome 12, two genes
being inherited as autosomal dominant alleles,and the other recessive.
Clinicalfeatures.
Alloftheseconditions confer a haemorrhagic tendency, and bleeding may be spontaneous, e.g. epistaxis or bleeding from the gums and mouth, or occur after minor trauma, e.g. dental treatment, or surgery.Haemophilia A and B cannot be distinguished
clinically. Children with haemophilia are usually
healthy at birth, though excessive cord bleeding
and heavy bruising due to birth trauma mayoccur. Symptoms develop towards the end of the
first year, especially bruising, but spontaneous
bleeds
become
less
frequent
in
adults.
The
popular idea that patients ‘bleed to death’ after
minor trauma is incorrect, though intracranial
haemorrhage may be life-threatening. The majorproblem is bleeding into muscles and weight-
bearingjoints (haemarthrosis)
andrecurrentjoint bleeds may cause serious damage there.
Patientsshould
notbegivenIMinjec-tions.
Bleeding
after
trauma
usually
requires
therapeutic intervention.Both
sexes
are
affected
in
vWD.
Mucosal
bleedingand
bleeding
after
trauma
or
sur-
gery
are
the
principal
problems
but,
unlike
haemophilia, bleeding into joints and muscles
occurs
only
rarely.
Menorrhagia
may
present
problems in fertile women. Patients with milder
fibrinolysis and anticoagulation
733
diseasemay
notpresentuntiltheirthirdor fourth decade.Management of haemophilia.
Genetic coun-
selling is an essential component of the care ofaffected families, and genetic analysis is available
for the detection of carriers. Antenatal diagnosis
is also used to detect those who have slipped
through the net, especially recent immigrants.Management involves detection of the partic-
ular clotting factor deficiency and its replace-
ment. In the 1980s and 1990s, freeze-dried factor
concentrates were prepared from large donorpools, but these transmitted unsuspected viral
infection to some patients, especially hepatitis
and HIV. This was countered by careful donor
selection, viral inactivation by irradiation andimmunization against hepatitis. However, there
was still concern about the possibility of trans-
mission of variant Creutzfeld-Jakob disease, and
recombinant human FrVIII and FrIX (rhFrVIII,rhFrIX) are now available and have replaced
concentrates from plasma.
Unfortunately, inhibitory antibodies to FrVIII
areformed
in
about
10%
of
treated
patients
and has required desensitization treatment in
specializedcentres (see
Chapter 2).
These
inhibitors are active against both endogenous
factors and those given therapeutically and causesevere problems in treatment. The problem has
beenexacerbated
bytheadministrationofrhFrVIII because it is not complexed with its
carriermolecule (vWFr)
andconsequentlyismore immunogenic. Inhibitor formation occurs
only rarely with FrIX. Recombinant activated
FrVII overcomes the inhibitor problem in both
types of haemophilia, because it bypasses thereactions that require FrVIII and FrIX in the
clotting cascade (Figure 11.7). It is licensed for
the treatment of haemophilia patients in whom
inhibitors have developed.Vasopressin,
the
ADH,
and
its
more
potent,
longer-actinganalogue
desmopressin
stimulate
the release of FrVIII (and vWFr) from endothelia
and WBCs and are used in mild to moderatehaemophilia
A
to
reduce
the
need
for
exog-
enous FrVIII. Vasopressin is used with an anti-fibrinolytic
agent,
e.g.
tranexamic
acid,
which
boostsits
effect.
The
latter
is
also
used
to
control
bleeding
due
to
minor
procedures
in haemophiliacs, e.g. dental extractions, but are not used with FrIX because of the thrombotic risk. Antifibrinolytic agents (see below) are also used with rhFrVIII to assist in the control
of
external bleeding.
Modulation of haemostasis - intrinsic
anticoagulant pathways and fibrinolysisThese are an integral part of the clotting cascade and
provide
for
control
of
haemostasis,
to prevent excessive coagulation that could com-
promise the circulation, and for the removal of the clot when it has fulfilled its functions ofpreventing haemorrhage and providing a support matrix for vascular wall repair.
Intrinsic anticoagulant pathways include:
•
TFrPI, mentioned above.
• Antithrombins (serpins), which block the
activation of FrV, FrVIII, FrXI and the conver-
sion of fibrinogen to fibrin.
•
Heparin,
which
potentiates
the
action
of
antithrombins against FrXa and thrombin,
the activity of antithrombins being increased 2000-fold.
•Thrombin probably binds to thrombomod-
ulin that is bound to endothelial cell surfaces.
When bound, thrombin loses its procoagu-lant
properties
and
is
transformed
into
a highly active anticoagulant.
•The
thrombin-thrombomodulin
complex
vastly increases the activation rate of protein
C (PrC). The PrCa breaks down FrVa andFrVIIIa and so inhibits additional thrombin production.
• The PrCa, together with its co-factors protein
S (PrS) and Ca2
, binds to phospholipid on
cell surfaces and so prevents the conversion of prothrombinto
thrombin
by
the
tenase
complex.
•FrXIIIa binds alpha2-antiplasmin to fibrin and
may protect the clot from fibrinolysis.
FibrinolysisSolution of the platelet-fibrin clot is an essential
sequel to clotting and removes the clot when
vascular repair has occurred and the clot is no
longer needed. Tissue type plasminogen acti-vator (tPA)
is secreted from endothelial cells
and, bound to fibrin, converts plasminogen toplasmin,
which
activates
tPA
by
splitting
it
into a double-stranded molecule. Plasmin alsohydrolyses
FrV,
FrVIII,
FrXIII,
fibrinogen
and
fibrin.The
latter
yields
fragment
X,
which
inhibits thrombin, and fragments Y, D and E,
whichinhibit
fibrin
polymerization.
Alpha2-
antiplasmin and tPA are inhibited, thus prevent-
ing undue fibrinolysis, fibrinogen consumptionand haemorrhage.
A diagram of the fibrinolytic pathways is given in Figure 11.8.
It is apparent from the foregoing account that
thenumerous
steps
and
counteracting
factors
involved in the haemostatic and fibrinolytic path-
ways enable the processes to be controlled withexquisite sensitivity to produce a response tailored
precisely to the requirements of local situations.
Recombinant
tissue-type
plasminogen
acti-
vator (rt-PA, alteplase) is used for clot dissolution
in
acute
myocardial
infarction (AMI) (see
Chapter 4),pulmonary
embolism (PE,seeChapter 5)
and,
under
the
supervision
of a
specialistneurological
physician,
for
acute
ischaemic stroke. It is administered by IV injec-
tion, followed by IV infusion. Alteplase treatmentfor AMI (see Chapter 4) must be given within 3 h
to be of maximal benefit, the earlier the better
to
minimize
permanent
myocardial
damage.
Reteplase and tenecteplase are also licensed for use
in AMI and have the advantage of being given by
IV injection only, without the need for IV infu-sion. Fibrinolytics are especially beneficial in
thosewith
STsegmentelevationorbundlebranch block (see Chapter 4).
Reteplase is licensed for the thrombolytic treat-
ment of AMI and should be given within 12 h. Heparin and aspirin are administered both before using reteplase and afterwards, to minimize the risk of re-infarction.
Immediate MRI/CT imaging will distinguishbetween
thromboembolic
and
haemorrhagic
strokes. Serious exacerbation of bleeding results iflytic agents or anticoagulants are used in unsus-
pected haemorrhagic stroke. Imaging will also
demonstrate the presence of occult pathology,
e.g.a
tumour
or
rapidly
enlarging
aneurysm,
and trauma, which are contra-indications to the
use of alteplase, etc. Other exclusion criteria arerecent
major
surgery,
recent
MI
and
bacterial
endocarditis (see Chapter 8).Streptokinase, another plasminogen activator
prepared from streptococci, is used for MI, PE,
DVT,
acute
arterial
thromboembolism
and
centralretinal
arteryorveinthrombosis.Although much cheaper than the other agents,
it has the disadvantage that it produces a persis-
tent allergic state and cannot be used repeatedly
ina
patient
without
special
precautions.
Anaphylaxis and Guillain-Barré syndrome are
serious side-effects.Many patients with branch retinal vein throm-
boembolismdo
notrequirethrombolytic therapy and do well with no treatment or aspirin antiplatelet therapy and end up with only minor retinal scarring.The sites of action of these agents are shown in Figure 11.8.
Antifibrinolyticagents
maybeusedtoprevent excessive blood loss in surgical proce-
dures. The use of tranexamic acid in haemophilia
is
referred
to
above.
It
is
given
by
slow
IV
injection in prostatectomy and orally in menor-
rhagia and hereditary haemorrhagic telangiec-
tasia. The latter is a rare, autosomal-dominantcondition in which there are widespread collec-
tionsof
dilatedcapillariesandarteriolesthatbleed easily. They are visible as a skin rash that
blanches under pressure and in the mouth, lips,
nasal mucosa and on the tips of the fingers and
toes. Recurrent profuse epistaxis and gastroin-testinal
bleeding
cause
anaemia,
but
the
first
presentation may be an embolic TIA or stroke.Tranexamic
acid
is
contra-indicated
in
severe
renaldisease
and
thromboembolic
states
and should be used with caution in severe haema-
turia because it may cause ureteric clotting and obstruction.
Aprotinin is a proteolytic enzyme inhibitor thatacts on plasmin and kallikrein. It is given by
slow IV injection or infusion in major surgery,
e.g. open heart surgery, tumour resection and
following thrombolytic therapy (see above). Itsuse in liver transplantation is unlicensed.
Etamsylateis
anotherantifibrinolyticagentthat is licensed for the prevention of blood loss
inmenorrhagia.
Itreducescapillarybleedingif
there
is
a
normal
platelet
count,
probably
bycorrecting
abnormal
platelet
adhesion
to
endothelium.
Procoagulable states - antiphospholipid syndromeThis is an autoimmune, connective tissue type
disorder (see Chapters 2 and 12) that is charac-
terized
by
antibodies
against
cell
membrane
phospholipids. It is sometimes associated with
SLE (see
Chapter 12).
Because
of
this,
and
becausethe
antibodiesalsoreactwiththeartificial antibody cardiolipin that was used in
the old Wasserman test for syphilitic antibodies,
they have been called ‘lupus anticoagulant’ and
‘anticardiolipin’.Aetiology, clinical features and pharmacotherapy
The autoantibody target is beta2-glycoprotein
(b2-GP1), sometimes known as apolipoprotein H.
The autoantibodies are known to reduce thelevels of annexin V, a surface adhesion protein
that occurs in vascular endothelium and the
placenta.
Clinical features.There are recurrent arterial and venous thromboses, causing about 20% of strokes occurring before the age of 45. Adrenal gland thrombosis may cause Addison’s disease. Placental clotting is responsible for about 30% of miscarriages in women who have suffered two or more spontaneous abortions.
There is the paradoxical situation of a pro-
thrombotic state in vivo and antibodies that havean anticoagulant effect in vitro, the reason for
which is unknown. Other features are migraine,
epilepsy
and
other
CNS
effects,
heart
valve
disease and the skin rash, livedo reticularis, a
net-like pinkish rash surrounding pale areas of
skin, showing the pattern of the blood supply inthe epidermis.
Investigations.The antibodies are detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The ESR and antinuclear antibody tests (ANA; see Chapter 12) are usually negative. The direct Coomb’s test (Figure 11.6) is positive.
Treatment is with aspirin, if mild, or warfarin
if moderate to severe (see below). Heparin has
to
be
substituted
for
warfarin
in
pregnancy,
which should be managed by a gynaecological
specialist.
Therapeutic anticoagulationThe purpose of this treatment is to prevent:
•Venous and arterial clotting and clot propaga-
tion, e.g. in antiphospholipid syndrome (see
above).•
Clotting in the cardiac chambers or coronary
circulation, e.g. in atrial fibrillation and on
prosthetic heart valves.
•Embolization from these clots, e.g. causing
stroke or PE. Clotting in the brain.
Patient assessment
Relative contra-indications include:
•Recent major surgery or traumatic injury, a
bleeding tendency, active bleeding, e.g. from
a peptic ulcer (see Chapter 3), or a family
history of excessive bleeding.
•Inadequately
controlled
hypertension
(see
Chapter 4).
•Severe
hepatic
or
renal
dysfunction.
Liver
disease causes a deficiency of erythropoietic
factors and important clotting proteins. Both
liver and kidney diseases result in deficiencies
of erythropoietin and thrombopoietin (seeChapter 2).
•Drug abuse, if injections are used.
•
Alcohol
abuse,
which
may
cause
gastric
bleeding and dementia and damages the liver.
•
Heparin may cause a hypersensitivity reaction
andisunsuitableinthrombocytopeniabecause it reduces the platelet count.
Many of these conditions are amenable to
treatment and anticoagulation should not be
initiateduntil
appropriatetherapyhasbeen given or until wounds are healed.A medication history must be taken and any
potential interactions considered, e.g. are the
drugs essential or can alternatives be used? This
is particularly important if warfarin therapy iscontemplated
because
its
activity
may
be
enhanced or reduced by a very large number ofother
agents,
including
aspirin
and
NSAIDs,
alcohol, herbal remedies (e.g. St John’s wort) anddietary changes (appropriate references should
be consulted for a comprehensive listing).
Although analgesic doses of aspirin are contra-
indicatedin
those
taking
warfarin,
low-dose aspirin (75 mg/day) is acceptable in those at risk of thromboembolism, provided that the dose of warfarin is determined (see below) while the
patient is taking the aspirin. It should be remem-
bered that clotting changes occur both whenstarting aspirin and if it is stopped.
Warfarin is a potent teratogen and causes severe
fetal deformity, especially if taken in weeks 6-12
of gestation, when organogenesis is occurring.However, the use of all antiplatelet drugs at any
stage of pregnancy may cause miscarriage or some
degree of fetal malformation. Heparins do not
crossthe
placenta
but
may
cause
undesirable
problems in the mother, e.g. a reduced platelet
count, hyperkalaemia due to inhibition of aldo-sterone secretion, skin necrosis, hypersensitivity
reactionsincluding
anaphylaxisandosteo-porosis. Low molecular weight heparins are safer,
but their use with prosthetic heart valves has been
contentious.
Preliminary investigations are listed in Table11.9.
Warfarin management
Pharmacology.
Warfarin
is
the
standard
coumarin oral anticoagulant in the UK. Aceno-
coumarol (nicoumalone) is used occasionally, as is phenindione, a non-coumarol.
Warfarininhibits
the
carboxylation
of
the
vitamin K-dependent clotting factors, i.e. FrII,
fibrinolysis and anticoagulation737
FrVII,
FrIX
and
FrX,
and
the
coagulation inhibitor proteins, i.e. PrC and its cofactor PrS (see above).
It is readily absorbed, the peak plasma level is
achieved at about 1.5 h, and the onset of action
is at about 48 h (24-72 h). Because of its once-daily dosing, steady-state levels are not reached
for about 5 days. Accordingly a loading dose is
given for the first 4 days of treatment. It is 97%
bound to plasma proteins, displacement beingthe basis of its interactions with other acidic
drugs.The
half-lifeisveryvariablebetweenindividuals, being in the range 24-72 h.
Therapy is monitored using the international
normalized
ratio
(INR; Table 11.8),
which
is
theratio
ofthepatient’sprothrombintime(PT)
to
that
of
a
normal
control,
using
stan-
dardizedreagents.
Recommended
target
levels
for various conditions are given in Table 11.10.
Induction.The initial loading dose is deter-
mined according to the baseline PT and should
be reduced if this is prolonged (normal values:PT 12-16 s, INR 1.0-1.3), if the patient’s liver
function tests are abnormal, if the patient is
elderly or in cardiac failure, is on parenteral
feeding, has a low body weight and is takingdrugs
known
to
potentiate
warfarin
activity.
Althoughthe
normal
initial
loading
dose
is
given in the BNF as 10 mg/day for 2 days, the
British Guidelines on Oral Anticoagulation (seeReferences and further reading, p. 741) recom-
mend 5 mg/day for 4 days. All recommendations
here are based on these guidelines.
High loading doses produce rapid reductionsin the levels of the anticoagulant proteins C and
S (see above and Figure 11.8) and may cause SC
thrombosis
and
skin
necrosis.
Accordingly
heparin (see below) is given to patients at high
risk
of
thromboembolism
before
initiating
warfarin, e.g. in atrial fibrillation (see Chapter 4)
or if there is a personal or family history of
venous thrombosis. This should be continueduntil the INR is2 for 2 days. In such cases the
startingdose
ofwarfarinshouldnotexceed5 mg/day.
Maintenancedosing.
Theaverageis3to9 mg/day,
but
this
varies
very
widely
(0.5
to
25 mg/day, and the required dose is managed on a ‘sliding scale’, e.g. Table 11.11.Problems with warfarin.
Most serious bleeds
occur at the target INR and the bleeding riskincreases
exponentially
with
INR
values
5.
Treatment of bleeds depends on their site andseverity. For major haemorrhage the following
are appropriate.
•
Stop warfarin and determine a baseline INR.
Determine and treat the cause of bleeding,e.g.
unsuspected
renal,
hepatic
or
gastro-
intestinal problems.•
Give prothrombin concentrate (FrII
FrVII
FrIX
FrX)
up
to
50 units/kg,
depending
on
the
INR,
or
fresh
frozen
plasma
(FFP)
15 mL/kg.
•
Give phytomenadione (vitamin K1) 5-10 mg by
slow IV injection and repeat after 24 h if theINR is still high. The degree of reversal is
determined by the severity of the bleed. It is preferablenot
toreverseanticoagulation completely, because warfarin resistance may then occur, and it may be advisable to halve the starting dose of phytomenadione.•
When bleeding has been controlled, monitor
the INR and resume warfarin at a lower dose.
For
minor
bleeds,
e.g.
epistaxis,
sub-
conjunctival haemorrhage, bruising and mild
haematuria, it is sufficient to stop or reduce
warfarin until the bleeding is controlled.For a high INR without bleeding, the Guide-
lines recommend:
•
INR
8: stop warfarin
until INR
5. Give
phytomenadione PO if there are any risk factors
for bleeding, e.g. liver or kidney dysfunction,
uncontrolledpeptic
ulceration
or
hyper-
tension, a personal or family history of bleed-
ing problems, or a non-concordant patient.However, phytomenadione
is oil-soluble and
oral dosing is not suitable for people withmalabsorption (see Chapter 3). Slow IV injec-
tion of a micellar formulation is suitable in
these patients.
•INR
6-8:
stop
warfarin
for
1-2 days
and
recommence at a lower dose.
•INR
6 but more than 0.5 above target level:
stop or reduce warfarin
until INR
5 and
recommence at a lower dose.
•
INRs within
0.5 of the target level are
acceptable and do not require action.
•
Cancer patients and those who have had a
venousthromboembolism (VTE)areatsignificant
risk
of
further
thrombosis
despiteappropriate
warfarin
treatment.
Trials
have
shown
that
low
molecular
weight heparins (LMWHs) halve the risk of
recurrent
VTE
compared
to
warfarin,
with
noincrease
inmortalityorbleedingepisodes.
The
BCSH
guidelines
state
that
LMWHsare
superior
to
warfarin
in
cancer
patients.
Because of these problems and the costs andinconvenience of warfarin
management there
have been numerous unsuccessful attempts atproducing an oral warfarin replacement that is
more predictable in use and so does not require
close monitoring. The only agent that was intro-
duced, ximelagatran, has been withdrawn perma-nently due to its potential to cause severe liver
damage.
All patients taking oral anticoagulants should
be issued with a treatment booklet that givesthe
patient
advice
on
their
treatment
and
provides a diary of all doses that have been used.This should be carried at all times as an alert to
doctors in the event of trauma requiring hospital
treatment.
HeparinsPharmacology
of
heparin.
Unfractionated
heparinis
a
glycosaminoglycan
produced
by
mast cells that is extracted from porcine mucosa.
It is therefore unsuitable for strictly observantJews and Muslims. Heparan sulphate is a related
compound found in the extracellular matrix of most eukaryotic cells.
Heparin has a rapid onset of action and a short
duration of effect. It consists of heterogeneouschains
of
molecular
weight 2-30 kDa.
Most
preparations can be given by IV or SC injection,but Calciparine (a proprietary heparin product)
can be used only by the SC route. Some indica-
tions for heparin use are given in Table 11.12.
Animportant
side-effect
of
heparin
use,
including
LMWHs (see
below),
is
immune-
mediatedheparin-induced
thrombocytopenia(HIT)
that
normally
occurs
after 6-14 days’
treatment and causes a paradoxical thrombosis.Thus platelet counts should be done for patients
in whom heparins are to be used for 5 days.
A platelet count of
50%
of normal requires
immediatewithdrawal
of
the
heparin.
If
continued anticoagulation is required, it should
be replaced with a heparinoid or lepirudin (seebelow).
Rapid reversal of heparin activity requires the
administration of protamine sulphate, a specific
antidote. LMWHs are reversed only partially byprotamine sulphate and their duration of action is
longer.
Inhibition
of
aldosterone
secretion
by
heparins may result in hyperkalaemia (see Chap-
ters 2, 4 and 5), with adverse cardiac effects, so
prolonged therapy requires serial plasma potas-sium measurements. Mild to moderate hyper-
kalaemiacan
betreatedwithapolystyrenesulphonate ion exchange resin, but glucose plus
insulin is needed if a more rapid reduction in
potassium level is required (see Chapter 9).
LMWHs, i.e. bemiparin, dalteparin, enoxaparin,reviparin
and
tinzaparin,
are
produced
from
unfractionated heparin by depolymerization andhave a molecular weight of 3-6 kDa. They are
generally as effective and safe as unfractionated
heparin
for the prophylaxis of venous throm-
boembolism and are probably more effective thanunfractionated
heparininorthopaedic surgery. Some indications for their use are given in Table 11.12.Because they have a longer duration of action than
unfractionated
heparin
they
are
given conveniently by once-daily SC injection.
Heparin activity is monitored using the acti-vated
partial
thromboplastin
time (APTT),
but this is not needed if heparins are used inwell-defined standard prophylactic regimens.
Other antithrombotic agents
Danaparoid sodium is a heparinoid that is licensed
for the prevention of DVT in general surgery andin patients with HIT (see above). However, it is
not clear whether there is a cross-reaction with
heparins.
Bivalirudinand
lepirudin
are
recombinant hirudins, i.e. they are the biogenetic analogues of hirudin, the anticoagulant that enables leeches (Hirudo
medicinalis)
to
maintain
blood
flow when feeding on animals. Their use is monitored by APTT, not INR.
Bivalirudin is licensed for use in patients under-
going percutaneous coronary angiography and angioplasty (see Chapter 4). The Scottish Medi-cines Consortium have approved it for restricted use in patients undergoing percutaneous coro-
nary interventions who would have been consid-
ered for treatment with unfractionated heparin plus a platelet GPIIa-IIIb inhibitor, i.e. abciximab, eptifibatide
and
tirofiban.
Lepirudin
is
licensed only for use in patients with HIT.
References and further reading741
Fondaparinux
sodium
is
a
new
synthetic
pentasaccharide FrXa inhibitor that is licensedfor the prophylaxis of venous thromboembolism
in medical patients, those undergoing abdom-
inal surgery and major orthopaedic surgery of
the legs.Bạn đang đọc truyện trên: AzTruyen.Top