L3.4: Hemostasis

Cards (11)

  • HEMOSTASIS
    Hem = blood, Stasis = standing still
    ● A fast and localized process of stopping the bleeding that results from a break in a blood vessel
    ● Blood usually clots within 3-6 minutes
    ○ The clot remains as endothelium regenerates
    ○ The clot is broken down after tissue repair
  • THREE PHASES OF HOMEOSTASIS
    1. Vascular spasms occur
    2. Platelet plug forms
    3. Coagulation events occur
  • THREE PHASES OF HOMEOSTASIS
    1. Vascular spasms occur
    ● Immediate response to blood vessel injury
    Vasoconstriction (narrowing of blood vessels) causes blood vessel spasms (“involuntary contraction”)
    ● Spasms narrow the blood vessel, decreasing blood loss
  • THREE PHASES OF HOMEOSTASIS
    2. Platelet plug forms
    Collagen fibers are exposed by a break in a blood vessel
    ● Platelets become sticky and cling to fibers
    ● Anchored platelets release chemicals to attract more platelets
    ● Platelets pile up to form a platelet plug
  • THREE PHASES OF HOMEOSTASIS
    3. Coagulation events occur
    ● Injured tissues release tissue factor (TF)
    ● PF3 (a phospholipid) interacts with TF, blood protein clotting factors, and calcium ions to trigger a clotting cascade
    Prothrombin activator converts prothrombin to thrombin (an enzyme)
  • THREE PHASES OF HOMEOSTASIS 3. Coagulation events occur
    ● Thrombin joins fibrinogen proteins into hairlike molecules of insoluble fibrin
    ● Fibrin forms a meshwork (the basis for a clot)
    ● Within the hour, serum is squeezed from the clot as it retracts to pull edges of the blood vessel together
    Serum is plasma minus clotting proteins
  • DISORDERS OF HEMOSTASIS
    Undesirable Clotting
    • Thrombus
    • Embolus
    Bleeding Disorders
    • Thrombocytopenia
    • Hemophilia
  • Thrombus
    ● A clot that develops and persists in an unbroken blood vessel
    ● Can be deadly in areas such as the lungs
  • Embolus
    ● A thrombus that breaks away and floats freely in the bloodstream
    ● Can later clog vessels in critical areas such as the brain
  • Thrombocytopenia
    ● Insufficient number of circulating platelets
    ● Arises from any condition that suppresses the bone marrow
    ● Even normal movements can cause bleeding from small blood vessels that require platelets for clotting
    ● Evidenced by petechiae (small purplish blotches on the skin)
  • Hemophilia
    ● Hereditary bleeding disorder
    ● Normal clotting factors are missing
    ● Minor tissue damage can cause life-threatening prolonged bleeding