Winter William E, Flax Sherri D, Harris Neil S
Department of Pathology, Immunology & Laboratory Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL.
Lab Med. 2017 Nov 8;48(4):295-313. doi: 10.1093/labmed/lmx050.
Primary hemostasis begins with endothelial injury. VWF, produced by endothelial cells, binds to platelets and links them to subendothelial collagen. Platelet-derived ADP and thromboxane activate non-adhered platelets via their GPIIb/IIIa receptors, allowing these platelets to participate in platelet aggregation. Secondary hemostasis is initiated with the binding of factor VII to extravascular tissue factor (TF). Factors II, VII, IX and X are vitamin K-dependent factors. The role of vitamin K is to assist in the addition of gamma carboxylate groups to glutamic acids in the "GLA" domains of these factors.In vitro the intrinsic pathway is initiated when fresh whole blood is placed in a glass tube. The negative charge of the glass initiates the "contact pathway" where FXII is activated and then FXIa cleaves FIX to FIXa. The extrinsic pathway is triggered when tissue factor, phospholipid and calcium are added to plasma anticoagulated with citrate. In vitro, FVII is activated to FVIIa, and TF-FVIIa preferentially converts FX to FXa activating the common pathway.The prothrombin time is commonly used to monitor warfarin anticoagulant therapy. To correct for differences in reagent and instrument, the international normalized ratio was developed to improve standardization of PT reporting globally. The activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) is used to evaluate the intrinsic and common pathways of coagulation. The aPTT is useful clinically as a screening test for inherited and acquired factor deficiencies as well as to monitor unfractionated heparin therapy although the anti-Xa assay is now the preferred measure of the effects of unfractionated heparin. The Clauss assay is the most commonly performed fibrinogen assay and uses diluted plasma where clotting is initiated with a high concentration of reagent thrombin.The mixing study assists in the assessment of an abnormally prolonged PT or aPTT. An equal volume of citrated patient plasma is mixed with normal pooled plasma and the PT or aPTT are repeated on the 1:1 mix. Factor activity assays are most commonly performed as a one-stage assay. The patient's citrated plasma is diluted and mixed 1-to-1 with a single factor-deficient substrate plasma. A PT or aPTT is performed on the above mix, depending on the factor being tested.Factor inhibitors are antibodies that are most commonly diagnosed in male patients with severe hemophilia A (FVIII deficiency) where they are induced by factor replacement therapy.Factor inhibitors can also appear in the form of spontaneous autoantibodies in both male and female individuals who were previously well. This is an autoimmune condition called "acquired hemophilia."Most coagulation laboratories can measure the plasma concentration of VWF protein (VWF antigen) by an immunoturbidimetric technique. Testing the functional activity of VWF, utilizes the drug ristocetin.The state of multimerization of VWF is important and is assessed by electrophoresis on agarose gels. Type 2a and 2b VWD are associated with the lack of intermediate- and high molecular weight multimers.The antiphospholipid syndrome (APLS) is an acquired autoimmune phenomenon associated with an increased incidence of both venous and arterial thromboses, as well as fetal loss. Typically, there is a paradoxical prolongation of the aPTT in the absence of any clinical features of bleeding. This is the so-called "lupus anticoagulant (LA) effect." The laboratory definition of the APLS requires the presence of either a "lupus anticoagulant" or a persistent titer of antiphospholipid antibodies.There are now 2 broad classes of direct-acting oral anticoagulants (DOACs): [1] The oral direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) such as dabigatran; and [2] The oral direct factor Xa inhibitors such as rivaroxaban and apixaban. The PT and aPTT are variably affected by the DOACs and are generally unhelpful in monitoring their concentrations. Most importantly, a normal PT or aPTT does NOT exclude the presence of any of the DOACs.
初级止血始于内皮损伤。内皮细胞产生的血管性血友病因子(VWF)与血小板结合,并将它们连接到内皮下胶原。血小板衍生的二磷酸腺苷(ADP)和血栓素通过其糖蛋白IIb/IIIa受体激活未黏附的血小板,使这些血小板参与血小板聚集。次级止血始于因子VII与血管外组织因子(TF)的结合。因子II、VII、IX和X是维生素K依赖因子。维生素K的作用是协助在这些因子的“GLA”结构域中的谷氨酸上添加γ羧基。在体外,当新鲜全血置于玻璃管中时,内源性途径被启动。玻璃的负电荷启动“接触途径”,在此途径中,因子XII被激活,然后因子XIa将因子IX裂解为因子IXa。当将组织因子、磷脂和钙添加到用柠檬酸盐抗凝的血浆中时,外源性途径被触发。在体外,因子VII被激活为因子VIIa,并且组织因子-因子VIIa优先将因子X转化为因子Xa,从而激活共同途径。凝血酶原时间通常用于监测华法林抗凝治疗。为校正试剂和仪器的差异,开发了国际标准化比值以改善全球PT报告的标准化。活化部分凝血活酶时间(aPTT)用于评估凝血的内源性和共同途径。aPTT在临床上可用作遗传性和获得性因子缺乏的筛查试验,以及监测普通肝素治疗,尽管现在抗Xa测定是监测普通肝素作用的首选方法。Clauss测定是最常用的纤维蛋白原测定方法,使用稀释血浆,其中用高浓度的试剂凝血酶启动凝血。混合试验有助于评估PT或aPTT异常延长的情况。将等量的柠檬酸盐抗凝患者血浆与正常混合血浆混合,并在1:1混合液上重复进行PT或aPTT测定。因子活性测定最常作为单阶段测定进行。将患者的柠檬酸盐抗凝血浆稀释,并与单一因子缺乏的底物血浆按1:1混合。根据所检测的因子,对上述混合液进行PT或aPTT测定。因子抑制剂是抗体,最常见于重度甲型血友病(因子VIII缺乏)的男性患者中,在这些患者中,它们由因子替代疗法诱导产生。因子抑制剂也可以以自发自身抗体的形式出现在既往健康的男性和女性个体中。这是一种自身免疫性疾病,称为“获得性血友病”。大多数凝血实验室可以通过免疫比浊技术测量VWF蛋白的血浆浓度(VWF抗原)。检测VWF的功能活性使用药物瑞斯托霉素。VWF的多聚化状态很重要,可通过琼脂糖凝胶电泳进行评估。2a型和2b型血管性血友病(VWD)与缺乏中、高分子量多聚体有关。抗磷脂综合征(APLS)是一种获得性自身免疫现象,与静脉和动脉血栓形成以及胎儿丢失的发生率增加有关。通常,在没有任何出血临床特征的情况下,aPTT会出现矛盾性延长。这就是所谓的“狼疮抗凝物(LA)效应”。APLS的实验室定义要求存在“狼疮抗凝物”或持续的抗磷脂抗体滴度。现在有两大类直接作用的口服抗凝剂(DOACs):[1]口服直接凝血酶抑制剂(DTIs),如达比加群;以及[2]口服直接因子Xa抑制剂,如利伐沙班和阿哌沙班。PT和aPTT受DOACs的影响各不相同,通常无助于监测它们的浓度。最重要的是,PT或aPTT正常并不能排除存在任何一种DOACs。