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BLOOD PHARMACOLOGY Peer Support 2014
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Case 1 Mrs A recently seen one of your colleagues complaining of fatigue. Her blood test results are now back and she has came to your clinic for a follow up appointment. You diagnose her as being anaemic. What are the 3 main classes of anaemia? - Microcytic, Hypochromic - Normocytic, Normochromic - Macrocytic, Normochromic
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Mrs A blood results are as follows: - Hb 9.9 (11.5-16g/dL) - MCV 71 (76-96fL) - WCC 7.8 (4-11x10^9/L) - Plts 220 (150-400x10^9/L) Which class of anaemia is Mrs A suffering from? Microcytic, hypochromic Give 3 causes of this type of anaemia? Iron deficiency Thalasseamias Anaemia of chronic disease Case continued…
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2 Causes of Normocytic, Normochromic anaemia? - Acute haemorrhage - Haemolytic anaemia - Bone marrow failure - Pregnancy 2 causes of Macrocytic, Normochromic anaemia? - B12 deficiency - Folate deficiency - Hypothyroidism
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Further blood tests are ordered for Mrs A. She has low ferritin levels, therefore her symptoms are likely due to poor iron intake. What medication would be suitable for Mrs A to start taking? - Ferrous Sulphate (200mg TDS) Ferrous sulphate is often poorly tolerated by patients. What are possible side effects? - Constipation - Black Stools - GI upset – dyspepsia, nausea
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Case 2 Mrs B is an 84 year old gentleman who has been referred to the emergency department as his blood results are abnormal. He takes warfarin for atrial fibrilation. What blood result is likely to be abnormal? - INR What is INR? - A standardised version of the prothrombin time INR should usually be 1. What is the usual therapeutic range? - 2-3
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Case 2 continued… Mr B’s INR is 6. What treatment options do you have? - Conservative: Stop warfarin and wait for his INR to fall before restarting warfarin - Give Vitamin K If Mr B was actively bleeding, what action should be taken? - FFP (Fresh frozen plasma) This will reverse the effect of warfarin immediately
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Warfarin – Mechanism of Action EXTRINSIC Pathway What enzyme does warfarin inhibit? - Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase (in the liver) – therefore lowering the level of reduced vitamin K. (Vitamin K required as a cofactor for the carboxylation of glutamate residues in some coagulation factors) Which coagulation factors does this have an effect upon? - II, VII, IX and X How long does it usually take for warfarin to have a therapeutic effect? Approx 72 hrs Why is this? - This is how long it takes for the clotting factors already active in the blood to be metabolised and depleted.
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Give 3 examples of situations when warfarin must not be given? Haemmorhagic Stroke 48 hours post partum During pregnancy Malignant hypertension Give 2 drugs/substances that may interact with warfarin, causing an INCREASE in INR? - Erythromycin - Acute alcohol intoxication Give 2 that can cause warfarin to have a reduced therapeutic effect? - Barbituates - Phenytoin
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Side effects of warfarin, besides bleeding? Skin Necrosis Pancreatitis Alopecia Hepatitis Jaundice NVD Warfarin vs Heparin - PeT PiTT – Try to remember which pathway and the relevant lab tests
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Heparin and LMWH Advantages of LMWH over Heparin? - Longer plasma half life - Better bioavailability - More predictable dose response Give an example of a LMWH drug? - Enoxaparin Mechanism of action of heparin/LMWH? - Bind to and activiate Antithrombin III - Antithrombin III inactivates Thrombin - Factor Xa is also inhibited
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If a patients is accidently given a heparin overdose – what can be given to reverse the effect? - Protamine Sulphate – a basic peptide, binds with heparin and prevents its function 2 Side effects of longterm heparin use? - Thrombocytopenia (HIT 2 types) - Alopecia - Osteoperosis
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