0521779407-16 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:18
Other Clotting Factor Deficiencies 1115
Signs & Symptoms
■excessive postoperative bleeding
■previous transfusions of red cells; anemia or iron therapy; excess
bleeding with NSAIDs, aspirin
tests
Screening
■prolonged PT, APTT, TT (thrombin time), RT (reptilase time), short-
ened euglobulin clot lysis
Confirmatory
■decreased factor I, II, V, VII, X, XI, XIII activity
differential diagnosis
■lupus anticoagulant, acquired anti-VIII – APTT mix
■hemophilia A or B – factor VIII or IX levels
■von Willebrand disease – ristocetin cofactor, vW antigen
■vitamin K deficiency – factor II, VII, IX, X deficiency
■thrombocytopenia, platelet dysfunction – platelet count, closure
time
■liver disease – may mimic factor deficiency
management
What to Do First
■use history, exam to assess severity, location of hemorrhage assess
pain, loss of motion, degree of blood loss, organ system damage
■initiate factor replacement 100% level immediately
■provide adequate pain relief and assess ongoing need
■monitor vital signs, blood pressure, heart rate, temperature
■obtain hemoglobin, platelet count, monitor factor level, PT, APTT
■keep patient at bed rest until assessment complete, improvement
occurs
General Measures
■estimate ongoing blood loss by vital signs, frequent CBC, APTT, PT,
and non-invasive tests, e.g. ultrasound
■maintain hemostasis with factor replacement on the half-life to start
■taper factor once bleeding slows
■avoid NSAIDs, ASA, platelet inhibitory drugs, heparin, or heparin
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