Anticoagulants Test Questions – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
what are the 3 main abnormal blood coagulation conditions?
answer
too little or too much coagulation, and presence of clots
question
what are some causes of coagulation deficiencies?
answer
genetic disorders (hemophila), aquired disorders (decubitus ulcers - bed sores), and tramua/sx
question
what are some specific coaguating agents?
answer
fresh blood, plasma, factor XIII, factor IX, vit K, thrombin, absorbable gelatin (gelfoam)
question
what is are fresh blood and plasma used for?
answer
replacement or supplement to lost blood -> can help supply missing clotting factors to pt
question
what is factor VIII used in?
answer
this is administered as plasma precipitate (fresh/frozen), can be produced from recombinant DNA and has a 8-12 hr half life. it is used in hemophila A
question
what is factor IX used in?
answer
this is used in hemophila B, and is derived from purified human factor (from plasma), it can be heat treated to reduce risk of disease transmission or produced from recombinant DNA
question
what are the vitamin K dependent factors?
answer
II, VII, IX, X
question
what is thrombin used for? how is it administered?
answer
thrombin is only used to arrest minor bleeding/oozing and can be in the form of bovine plasma, topical, or a powder. it activates platelets and converts V & VII to their active forms
question
what is absorbable gelatin (gelfoam) used for? how is it administered?
answer
this can be used for sx and trauma and is denatured collagen, available as sponge or powder, and is non antigenic. it doesn't have to be removed (will be broken down and absorbed - no wound-disturbing removal)
question
what is the risk of coagulating agents: blood, plasma, and factors VIII/IX?
answer
they could be carrying viral infections (hepatitis, AIDs, etc)
question
what are some reasons for using drugs that prevent coagulation?
answer
thrombo-emobolic diseases, extracorporeal devices (renal dialysis), and prophylatic tx
question
what are the injectable anti-coagulative agents?
answer
heparin, lepirudin, bivaliruden, and argatroban
question
how is heparin administered? what does it do?
answer
heparin is given SC or IV, (if given IM = hematoma). heparin potentiates antithrombin III, a serine protease inhibitor, causing more inactivation of thrombin
question
what are ADRs for heparin?
answer
unwanted bleeding in mucuous membranes, open wounds, and intracrainal & GI areas
question
what are in vivo indications for heparin?
answer
prevention and treatment of deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolisms, and arterial thrombosis
question
what is heparin used for in vitro?
answer
hemodialysis lines, indwelling vascular catheters, and some lab blood samples
question
is there an antagonist/reversing agent for heparing (in case of OD)?
answer
yes - protamine sulfate
question
what is used when pts have HIT (heparin induced thrombocytopenia)
answer
lepirudin and argatroban
question
what is the M/A for lepirudin? what is it a derivative of?
answer
it is a highly specific *irreversible thrombin inhibitor. it is a hirudin derivative
question
what are ADRs for lepirudin?
answer
hemorrage can occur at any site, which any unexpected call in hgb/BP should lead to consideration of -> therefore anticoagulation status should be monitored closely (aPTT)
question
what is bivaliruden?
answer
another hiruden derivative that has specific and *reversible direct thrombin inhibition. it has rapid on/off set and inhibits platelet activation (when you stop the IV, its effects will stop)
question
when is bivaliruden used?
answer
for percutanedous coronary angioplasty
question
what ADRs are associated with bivaliruden?
answer
hemmorage at any site, though most bleeding occurs at the site of arterial puncture
question
what does argatroban do? when is it used?
answer
argatroban has direct thrombin inhibition (both free & clot related) by inhibition of thrombin catalyzed OR induced reactions (including *fibrin formation and activation of coagulation factors V, VIII, and *XIII). its main indication is pts with HIT
question
what is the M/A for argatroban?
answer
it inhibits protein C activation, platelet aggregation, reversibly binds the thrombin active site (*does not require antithrombin III as a cofactor), and has rapid elimination (t 1/2: 39-51 min)
question
what are ADRs for argatroban?
answer
hemorrage at any site in the body, and intracranial hemorrage has been observed
question
what are the oral anticoagulants?
answer
warfarin, dabigatran etexilate, antiplatelet agents (NSAIDS, clopidogrel, ticlopidine, prasugrel, ticagrelor), dipyridamole, and prostacylin
question
what is warfarin?
answer
this is a PO administered vit K antagonist that leads to decreased synthesis of factors II, VII, IX, and X. is is named for the place in wisconson that sponsored its reasearch, and was developed originally as a rat poison (rats bled to death/cows were too big be affected: dose related)
question
ADRs for warfarin?
answer
unwanted bleeding (same as heparin). warfarin has a very tight therapeutic range -> pts on this must be monitored monthly. centrum silver has vit K!
question
what is given in the case of a warfarin OD?
answer
fresh blood -> has all the necessary factors?
question
can vit K be administered as an anticoagulation agent?
answer
yes in 2 formulations (aquamephyton and konakion)
question
what factors can decrease the effect of warfarin?
answer
enzyme induction (in liver), increased production of clotting factors, increased vit K absorption (supplements, diet), and inhibition of biotransformation
question
what factors would increase the effect of warfarin?
answer
decreased vit K absorption, displacement from plasma proteins (some NSAIDs, other drugs can do this), inhibition of platelet aggregation (things like ASA), and decreased production of clotting factors
question
what is dagbigatran etexilate? M/A? use?
answer
an anticoagulation agent that directly binds to and inhibits thrombin. it is used (only) to prevent venous thombosis events following total hip/knee sx. -> still in US trials, shows benefit over warfarin for a fib
question
what is the M/A for ASA?
answer
irreversible COX inhibitor (and there fore, the effect lasts the life of the platelet: 7-10 days); which als odecreases eicosanids (TXA 2) that stimulate platelet aggregation
question
what is clopidogrel (PLAVIX)?
answer
this NSAID inhibits the ADP-induced binding for fibrinogen to platelets by covalent *irreversible blockage of the ADP receptor on platelets
question
when is clopidogrel used?
answer
cardiovascular conditions that are prone to clot formation
question
what are side effects associated with clopidogrel?
answer
thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
question
what is ticlopidine?
answer
an NSAID that inhibits platelet function by inducting a thrombasthenia-like state by *irreverible inhibition of ADP-induces platelet-fibrinogen binding and subsequent platelet-platelet interactions (same as clopidogrel)
question
what is the M/A for ticlopidine?
answer
irreversible binding to ADP-induced platelt-fibrinogen binding and subsequent platelet-platelet interactions (same as clopidogrel, used as an alternate if on a budget)
question
what is ticlopidine used for?
answer
it is mainly restricted to tx of acute cerebral ischemia (early stages stroke)
question
ADRs for ticlopidine?
answer
bleeding, nausea, some diarrhea and very rare neutropenia
question
what is the M/A for prasugrel?
answer
this NSAID inhibits platelet *activation which is mediated by the P2Y12 ADP receptor
question
what is the only indication for prasugrel?
answer
prevention of clots in pts undergoing angioplasty
question
what are side effects for prasugrel?
answer
it can cause significant bleeding (sometimes fatal) and TTP has been reported <- pt must be monitored
question
that is ticagrelor? does it require bioactivation
answer
this NSAID is a *reversible P2Y12 ADP receptor antagonist that does not require bioactivation = faster onset
question
what is ticagrelor used for?
answer
cardiovascular conditions prone to clot formation (like clopidogrel)
question
what are side effects for ticagrelor?
answer
breathing difficulty, heart rhythm abnormalities, major bleeding, and a slightly higher risk of minor bleeding
question
what is dypyridamole?
answer
an NSAID that increases cellular conc. of cyclic AMP in platelets (inhibits phosphodiesterase which breaks it down) that alone has little to no effect, but is usually used in combination with warfarin for prophylaxis of thromboemboli for prosthetic heart valves
question
what is prostacyclin (PGI2) used for? M/A?
answer
prostacyclin (PGI2) increases intraplatelet cyclic AMP (by stimulation of adenylate cyclase which synthsizes it) and blocks platelet adhesion and aggregation
question
what is a increase in cAMP associated with? which drugs address this?
answer
increase in cAMP = blocks aggregation and adhesion prostacyclin and dipyramole both address this
question
what are the fibrinolytic agents?
answer
streptokinase, urokinase, and tissue plasminogen activator
question
what is the M/A for streptokinase?
answer
streptokinase complexes with plasminogen, causing a conformational change and activates free plasminogen to plasmin -> producing a *non-clot specific systemic plasminogen activation. it has a half-life of 15-30 min
question
what is urokinase (derived from human urine/kidney cells)?
answer
urokinase cleaves the arg-arg 560-561 peptide bond in plasminogen, activating it to plasmin and produces a *non-clot specific systemic plasminogen activation
question
what can both streptokinase and urokinase be used for?
answer
cerebral vascular accidents (strokes) if used within a 3 hr window
question
what is tissue plasminogen activator (TPA)?
answer
TPA binds to fibrin and activates plasminogen by cleaving the arg-arg 560-561 bond of fibrin-bound plasminogen. it is *clot specific (inefficient at activating free systemic plasminogen)
question
what is anisoylated plasminogen streptokinase activator complex (APSAC)?
answer
APSAC prevents the proteolytic activity of plasminogen by acetylation at the active site of plasminogen, thereby inhibiting its action
question
what is the amniocaproic acid (AMICAR) used for?
answer
the antifibrinolytic agent aminocaproic acid binds to the lysine binding sites on plasmin/plasminogen and blocks binding to fibrin targets -> potent fibrinolysis inhibitor, but **cannot lyse new thrombi
question
how is aminocaproic acid administered? what is a major caveat for its use? ADRs?
answer
aminicaproic acid can be administered oral/IV. it can reverse excessive fibrinolysis, but not lyse new thrombi. ADRs include myopathy and muscle necrosis
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New