PRE HOSPITAL
Direct pressure for control of hemorrhage
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Resuscitation with crystalloid and packed RBCs as needed
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- As with all significant bleeding, apply direct pressure to site of bleeding
- 3 treatment strategies:
- Increase endogenous vWF
- Replacement of vWF
- Agents that generally promote hemostasis but do not alter levels of vWF
- Desmopressin acetate (DDAVP):
- Promotes release of vWF from endothelial cells, increases factor VIII levels
- Maximal levels obtained at 30–60 min, with duration of 6–8 hr
- Effective for type 1; variable effectiveness for type 2; not indicated for type 3
- Patients may use intranasal spray at home before menses or minor procedures
- vWF replacement therapy:
- Humate-P factor VIII concentrate with vWF:
- Treated to reduce virus transmission risks
- Indicated for type 3 vWD and severe bleeding in all types
- Doses, length of treatment depend on severity of bleeding
- Cryoprecipitate is no longer a treatment of choice as it carries risk of virus transmission. If no other treatments are available and patient having life-threatening hemorrhage, it can be used
- Antifibrinolytic therapy:
- Aminocaproic acid (Amicar) and tranexamic acid (Cyklokapron)
- Block plasmin formation to prevent clot degradation
- Topical agents—applied directly to bleeding site:
- Gelfoam or Surgicel soaked in thrombin
- Micronized collagen
- Fibrin sealant
- Avoid antiplatelet agents
First Line
- Minor bleeding (epistaxis, oropharyngeal, soft tissue):
- IV or intranasal desmopressin
- Major bleeding (intracranial, retroperitoneal):
- Replace vWF and factor VIII so activity level is at least 100 IU/dL
Second Line
- Minor bleeding:
- vWF concentrate:
- Given if desmopressin is ineffective
- Should be given in consultation with a hematologist
- Aminocaproic acid or tranexamic acid:
- For mild mucocutaneous bleeding
MEDICATION
- Aminocaproic acid: 50–60 mg/kg PO/IV q4–q6h
- Cryoprecipitate: 10–12 U initial dose or 2–4 bags/10 kg
- Desmopressin (DDAVP):
- 0.3 μg/kg IV, max. 20 μg
- 0.3 μg/kg SQ, max. 20 μg
- 300 μg (1 spray each nostril) intranasal
- Peds: <50 kg—150 μg (1 spray in each nostril) intranasal
- Antihemophilic factor/vWF complex, human (Humate-P): 20–40 U/kg IV
- Tranexamic acid: 20–25 mg/kg PO, IV q8h
- Fresh frozen plasma (FFP)—10–20 mL/kg IV
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Patients with significant bleeding requiring further IV medical management
- Observation after major trauma for types 2 and 3 vWD
- Consider transferring patients with major bleeding events to a center with round-the-clock lab capability, and a care team that includes a hematologist and a surgeon skilled in management of bleeding disorders
Discharge Criteria
- Control of hemorrhage
- Adequate follow-up and access to medical therapy
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Hematology:
- Severe, difficult-to-manage bleeding
- Prior to elective/semielective procedures
- Definitive workup of suspected cases
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
Patients may not know their type of hemophilia:
- Consider FFP for the patient with unknown type of hemophilia in the setting of trauma or bleeding
ADDITIONAL READING
- Mannucci P. Treatment of von Willebrand disease.
N Engl J Med
. 2004;351:683–694.
- Nichols WL, Hultin MB, James AH, et al. von Willebrand disease (vWD): Evidence-based diagnosis and management guidelines, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Expert Panel report (USA).
Haemophilia
. 2008;14:171–232.
- Pacheco L, Costantine M, Saade G, et al. von Willebrand disease and pregnancy: A practical approach for the diagnosis and treatment.
Am J Obstet Gynecol.
2010;203(3):194–200.
- Robertson J, Lillicrap D, James P. Von Willebrand disease.
Pediatr Clin North Am.
2008;55(2):377–392.
- The Diagnosis, Evaluation and Management of von Willebrand Disease. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
Available at
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/vwd./
Accessed January 14, 2013.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
Hemophilia
CODES
ICD9
286.4 Von Willebrand's disease
ICD10
D68.0 Von Willebrand's disease
WARFARIN COMPLICATIONS
Molly C. Boyd
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Most commonly prescribed oral anticoagulant
- Inhibits vitamin K metabolism required for activation of factors II, VII, IX, and X
- Blocks the coagulation cascade’s extrinsic system and common pathway
- Commonly used for venous thromboembolism and prevention of embolism with prosthetic heart valves or atrial fibrillation
- Adjustments based on the international normalization ratio (INR)
- Typical therapeutic range 2–3
- 2.5–3.5 for mechanical valves and antiphospholipid syndromes
- Contraindications include any condition in which the risk of hemorrhage or adverse reaction outweighs clinical benefit
- Prior hypersensitivity
- Skin reactions
- Recent surgeries
- Active or potential GI, intracerebral, or genitourinary bleeding
- Fall risk
ETIOLOGY
- Bleeding complications:
- 15% of patients/yr
- 4.9% major bleeding events
- Up to 0.8% fatal, most commonly intracranial hemorrhage (ICH)
- Bleeding risk is directly related to INR
- Increases dramatically above 4
- Risk factors for nontherapeutic INR:
- Age >75 yr
- Hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, severe heart disease
- Diabetes, renal insufficiency
- Alcoholism or liver disease
- Hypermetabolic states, fever
- Hyperthyroidism
- Cancer
- Collagen vascular disease
- Hereditary warfarin resistance
- Cytochrome P450 polymorphism
Common Interactions
Increase INR
| Decrease INR
|
Multiple antibiotics
| Carbamazepine
|
NSAIDs
| Barbituates
|
Amiodorone
| Rifampin
|
Propranolol
| Haloperidol
|
Prednisone
| St. John wort
|
Cimetidine
| High vitamin K foods
|
Grapefruit, garlic
|
Ginko biloba
|
Pregnancy Considerations
- Pregnancy class X
- Crosses the placenta causing spontaneous abortion and birth defects
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Presentation may be occult or dramatic:
- High index of suspicion required to detect potentially life-threatening complications
- Subtherapeutic/low INR: Breakthrough thrombosis
- Therapeutic and supratherapeutic: GI, CNS, retroperitoneal bleeding
- Skin necrosis and limb gangrene:
- Classic lesions of warfarin skin necrosis and limb gangrene begin on the 3rd–8th day of therapy
- Capillary thrombosis in subcutaneous fat (skin necrosis) and obstruction of venous circulation of the limb (limb gangrene)
- Often associated with protein C deficiency
- Eschar in center differentiates lesions from ecchymosis
- Intentional overdose
- May be asymptomatic
- Superwarfarin (rat poison) can result in prolonged bleeding risk (months)
- Follow serial INR
- Do not start vitamin K empirically, may mask late development of INR elevation
- Consider activated charcoal