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Common bleeding and coagulation issues

Common bleeding and coagulation issues

FromBlood & Cancer


Common bleeding and coagulation issues

FromBlood & Cancer

ratings:
Length:
30 minutes
Released:
Mar 12, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

There’s an art to taking a thorough bleeding history. In this episode, Adam Cuker, MD, director of the Hemophilia and Thrombosis Center at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, shares the most important questions to ask and the challenges in assessing risk in patients about to undergo surgery and those with active bleeding. In Clinical Correlation, Ilana Yurkiewicz, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, talks about delivering good news to patients.    Practice points: Always take a thorough bleeding history. Ask patients about bleeding from head to toe. Even if the basic laboratory evaluation is normal, the patient may still have a bleeding disorder. *  *  *  Assessing bleeding risk before surgery  How do you advise patients about to go into surgery who say they bruise easily? This situation comes up frequently. In the case of emergency/urgent surgery, there’s not time for a prolonged evaluation. Take a careful bleeding history: Always ask patients about any history of spontaneous bleeding. Ask about epistaxis, gingival bleeding, rectal bleeding, heavy menstrual periods. Go down the body from head to toe. It’s also important to ask about hemostatic challenges. Has the patient had any prior surgeries? If it’s a woman, has she had pregnancies and deliveries? Did the patient experience abnormal bleeding with those challenges? Prompt patients to consider whether they have had surgery that they might not think about, such as tooth extraction, tonsil removal, or polyps removed from their colon. Seek to establish the time course: Is this a patient who has had abnormal bleeding for their entire life, or did it start later in life? This can provide clues about whether this is a congenital bleeding disorder or an acquired condition. Ask about such comorbidities as liver and kidney disease, which can be associated with an increased bleeding risk. Get a complete medication list. Anticoagulants and antiplatelets are the obvious culprits but consider fish oil and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) for bleeding. Ask about family history: Is there a family member who has a diagnosed bleeding disorder or even a history of abnormal bleeding? Ask about social history: Are you engaged in any activities associated with an increased risk of trauma? Challenges to taking a bleeding history: Some bleeding symptoms are very common to the normal population. A surprisingly high percentage of people with no bleeding disorders report easy bruising, frequent nose bleeds as a child, heavy menstrual bleeding. Laboratory work-up What’s the basic lab evaluation? Complete blood count (CBC) Prothrombin time (PT) and partial thromboplastin time (PTT) Comprehensive metabolic panel to make sure the patient doesn’t have liver or kidney disease If the basic lab evaluation is normal can they have a bleeding disorder? Yes. The most common conditions are von Willebrand disease and platelet function disorder. Less common are rare disorders of fibrinolysis or blood vessel disorders that can lead to abnormal bleeding. Assessing patients with active bleeding (post catheterization) Consider whether bleeding is a complication of the procedure or a bleeding disorder. An efficient but thorough bleeding history is critical. Order a basic lab work-up and review medications looking for antiplatelet medications in particular. This approach is a very similar to a patient without active bleeding who is going into surgery. Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) and bleeding PT and PTT are insensitive to DOACs but order them anyway if the patient is bleeding. If the test is prolonged, that could suggest that there are substantial levels of drug in circulation. If the test results come back normal, that doesn’t rule out the possibility that there are clinically meaningful levels of drug circulation that are contributing to bleeding. Getting a rapid anti-Xa assay could provide more information, but many clinicians don’t have access to that test. If you can’t get
Released:
Mar 12, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The official podcast feed of MDedge Hematology-Oncology, part of the Medscape Professional Network. On Thursdays, Dr. David Henry interviews key opinion leaders and rising stars in hematology and oncology. The information in this podcast is provided for informational and educational purposes only.