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HEMOPHILIA

DR. TARIQ SAEED
Assistant Professor
Paediatric Department
Holy Family Hospital Rawalpindi
Definition



Hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency) and
hemophilia B (factor IX deficiency)
Rare bleeding disorders due to inherited deficiencies
of coagulation factors
Types




Haemophilia A (Classic) Factor VIII
deficiency
Haemophilia B (Christmas Disease) Factor
IX deficiency
Hemophilia A & B


clinically similar:



occur in approximately 1 in 5,000 male births



account for 90% of congenital bleeding
disorders



Hemophilia A is approximately 5 times more
common than B
Etiology






Inherited as a sex linked recessive trait with bleeding
manifestations only in males
genes which control factor VIII and IX production are
located on the x chromosome; if the gene is
defective synthesis of these proteins is defective
female carriers transmit the abnormal gene
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
 Factors

VIII and IX participate in a complex
required for the activation of factor X.
 After injury, the initial hemostatic event is
formation of the platelet plug, together with
the generation of the fibrin clot that prevents
further hemorrhage. In hemophilia A or B,
clot formation is delayed and is not robust.
Disease Severity






severity is dependent on blood levels of
functioning factor VIII or IX
severity varies markedly between families but
is relatively constant among family members
in successive generations
remains relatively unchanged throughout life
Classification

% normal
factor level

Causes of bleeding

Severe

< 1%

bleeding after trivial injury
or spontaneous

Moderate

1 - 5%

bleeding after minor injury;
occasional spontaneous
bleeds

Mild

6 - 30 %

following major trauma,
surgical or dental
procedures
Clinical Features – Joint Bleeds




Joints (Hemarthrosis)
 Knees, ankles and elbows most common sites
 begin as the child begins to crawl and walk
 many bleeds occur between the ages of 6 and 15
years
Single joint bleed: stiffness, swelling, pain, loose
pack position
Sub Acute Hemarthrosis






Develops after repeated bleeds into the joint
Synovium becomes inflamed
Hypertrophy, hyperplasia and increased
vascularity of synovial membrane
Hemosiderosis: hemoglobin of intra articular
blood is degraded and iron deposited into the
joint space
Chronic Arthropathy







Progressive destruction of a joint
Pannus (inflammed synovium), & enzymes
begin to destroy articular cartilage
Microfracture and cyst formation in
subchondral bone
End stage: firbrous joint contracture, and
disorganization of articular surfaces
Clinical Features – Muscle Bleeds







Bleeding into muscle or soft tissue
Less tendency to recurrent bleeds
Sites: iliopsoas, calf, upper arm and forearm,
thigh, shoulder area, buttock
Symptoms: pain, swelling, muscle spasm
Complications: nerve compression,
contracture
Other Sites of Hemorrhage





Abdomen
GI tract
Intracranial bleeds
Around vital structures in the neck
LABORATORY FINDINGS AND
DIAGNOSIS
 Factor

VIII or factor IX deficiency leads to
prolongation of APTT.
 In severe hemophilia, APTT is usually 2–3
times the upper limit of normal.
 All other screening tests of with in normal
limit.
 The

specific assay for factors VIII and IX will
confirm the diagnosis of hemophilia.
Management


Replacement of missing clotting factor




Plasma products
Cryoprecipitate
Concentrates of Factor VIII Factor IX
 Early,

appropriate therapy is the hallmark of
excellent hemophilia care.
 Mild to moderate bleeding, levels of factor
VIII or factor IX must be raised to hemostatic
levels in the 35–50% range.
 For life-threatening or major hemorrhages,
the dose should aim to achieve levels of
100% activity.
Role of Desmopressin in Hemoplhilia A
 With

mild factor VIII hemophilia, the patient's
endogenously produced factor VIII can be
released by the administration of
desmopressin acetate.
Other Medical Treatment






Analgesics (no aspirin)
Good dental care
Education – life long management
Psychological counseling
Acute and long term management of
musculoskeletal problems
Musculoskeletal Management


Acute Bleeds:





Immediate replacement factor
Immobilize joint
No weight bearing
Immediate medical attention if complications arise
Musculoskeletal Management


After 24 hours:






Continue minimal or no weight bearing for lower
extremity bleed
Active range of motion; gentle stretching
Corrective positioning (splinting ??)
Isometric strengthening; progress to isotonic
Musculoskeletal Management






Long term:
Repeated musculoskeletal examination (annual or
biannual)
Measurement of leg length, girth, ROM, strength,
gait, function
Physiotherapy treatment: based on assessment
findings
Prophylactic factor replacement


usually provided every 2–3 days to maintain a measurable
plasma level of clotting factor (1–2%) when assayed just
before the next infusion (trough level).
Education of Patient and Family






Importance of early factor replacement
Use of helmet when riding tricycle/bicycle
Sports: contact sports discouraged for severe
hemophiliacs; swimming, cross country
skiing, tennis, golf, baseball, bicycling –
generally considered safe
Footwear
CHRONIC COMPLICATIONS
Long-term complications of hemophilia A
and B include
 Chronic arthropathy
 Development of an inhibitor to either factor
VIII or factor IX,
 Risk of transfusion-transmitted infectious
diseases.
Hemophilia lecture by dr. tariq saeed

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Hemophilia lecture by dr. tariq saeed

  • 1.
  • 2. HEMOPHILIA DR. TARIQ SAEED Assistant Professor Paediatric Department Holy Family Hospital Rawalpindi
  • 3. Definition  Hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency) and hemophilia B (factor IX deficiency) Rare bleeding disorders due to inherited deficiencies of coagulation factors
  • 4. Types   Haemophilia A (Classic) Factor VIII deficiency Haemophilia B (Christmas Disease) Factor IX deficiency
  • 5. Hemophilia A & B  clinically similar:  occur in approximately 1 in 5,000 male births  account for 90% of congenital bleeding disorders  Hemophilia A is approximately 5 times more common than B
  • 6. Etiology    Inherited as a sex linked recessive trait with bleeding manifestations only in males genes which control factor VIII and IX production are located on the x chromosome; if the gene is defective synthesis of these proteins is defective female carriers transmit the abnormal gene
  • 7.
  • 8. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY  Factors VIII and IX participate in a complex required for the activation of factor X.  After injury, the initial hemostatic event is formation of the platelet plug, together with the generation of the fibrin clot that prevents further hemorrhage. In hemophilia A or B, clot formation is delayed and is not robust.
  • 9. Disease Severity    severity is dependent on blood levels of functioning factor VIII or IX severity varies markedly between families but is relatively constant among family members in successive generations remains relatively unchanged throughout life
  • 10. Classification % normal factor level Causes of bleeding Severe < 1% bleeding after trivial injury or spontaneous Moderate 1 - 5% bleeding after minor injury; occasional spontaneous bleeds Mild 6 - 30 % following major trauma, surgical or dental procedures
  • 11. Clinical Features – Joint Bleeds   Joints (Hemarthrosis)  Knees, ankles and elbows most common sites  begin as the child begins to crawl and walk  many bleeds occur between the ages of 6 and 15 years Single joint bleed: stiffness, swelling, pain, loose pack position
  • 12. Sub Acute Hemarthrosis     Develops after repeated bleeds into the joint Synovium becomes inflamed Hypertrophy, hyperplasia and increased vascularity of synovial membrane Hemosiderosis: hemoglobin of intra articular blood is degraded and iron deposited into the joint space
  • 13. Chronic Arthropathy     Progressive destruction of a joint Pannus (inflammed synovium), & enzymes begin to destroy articular cartilage Microfracture and cyst formation in subchondral bone End stage: firbrous joint contracture, and disorganization of articular surfaces
  • 14.
  • 15. Clinical Features – Muscle Bleeds      Bleeding into muscle or soft tissue Less tendency to recurrent bleeds Sites: iliopsoas, calf, upper arm and forearm, thigh, shoulder area, buttock Symptoms: pain, swelling, muscle spasm Complications: nerve compression, contracture
  • 16. Other Sites of Hemorrhage     Abdomen GI tract Intracranial bleeds Around vital structures in the neck
  • 17. LABORATORY FINDINGS AND DIAGNOSIS  Factor VIII or factor IX deficiency leads to prolongation of APTT.  In severe hemophilia, APTT is usually 2–3 times the upper limit of normal.  All other screening tests of with in normal limit.
  • 18.  The specific assay for factors VIII and IX will confirm the diagnosis of hemophilia.
  • 19. Management  Replacement of missing clotting factor    Plasma products Cryoprecipitate Concentrates of Factor VIII Factor IX
  • 20.  Early, appropriate therapy is the hallmark of excellent hemophilia care.  Mild to moderate bleeding, levels of factor VIII or factor IX must be raised to hemostatic levels in the 35–50% range.  For life-threatening or major hemorrhages, the dose should aim to achieve levels of 100% activity.
  • 21. Role of Desmopressin in Hemoplhilia A  With mild factor VIII hemophilia, the patient's endogenously produced factor VIII can be released by the administration of desmopressin acetate.
  • 22. Other Medical Treatment      Analgesics (no aspirin) Good dental care Education – life long management Psychological counseling Acute and long term management of musculoskeletal problems
  • 23. Musculoskeletal Management  Acute Bleeds:     Immediate replacement factor Immobilize joint No weight bearing Immediate medical attention if complications arise
  • 24. Musculoskeletal Management  After 24 hours:     Continue minimal or no weight bearing for lower extremity bleed Active range of motion; gentle stretching Corrective positioning (splinting ??) Isometric strengthening; progress to isotonic
  • 25. Musculoskeletal Management      Long term: Repeated musculoskeletal examination (annual or biannual) Measurement of leg length, girth, ROM, strength, gait, function Physiotherapy treatment: based on assessment findings Prophylactic factor replacement  usually provided every 2–3 days to maintain a measurable plasma level of clotting factor (1–2%) when assayed just before the next infusion (trough level).
  • 26. Education of Patient and Family     Importance of early factor replacement Use of helmet when riding tricycle/bicycle Sports: contact sports discouraged for severe hemophiliacs; swimming, cross country skiing, tennis, golf, baseball, bicycling – generally considered safe Footwear
  • 27. CHRONIC COMPLICATIONS Long-term complications of hemophilia A and B include  Chronic arthropathy  Development of an inhibitor to either factor VIII or factor IX,  Risk of transfusion-transmitted infectious diseases.

Notas del editor

  1. Von Willibrands Disease: RARELY REQUIRE PT Autosomal dominant and therefore occurs in males and females Clinical Features: Excessive bleeding from mucous membranes (nose bleeds, heavy menstrual bleeding, bleeding following dental procedures, cuts) Risk of excessive bleeding following child birth, tooth extraction, surgery or trauma Note:There are also more rare forms of factor deficiency – factor X and XI.
  2. Affected male marries a normal female: none of sons will be affected, all daughters will be carriers Female carrier marries normal male: 50% chance sons will be affected and 50% chance daughters will be carriers
  3. 70-80% of bleeds are into joints Also shoulders and wrists; rarely small joints of the hands, feet, hips, TMJ or spine Single joint bleed: prodrome of stiffness and/or pain followed by swelling (effusion) and increased temperature of the skin over the joint. Joint held in a position of comfort – loose pack position Responds rapidly to replacement of clotting factor; blood resorbs and there should be no residual joint problems.
  4. Joint can quickly become a target joint – recurrent bleeds Develop a thick boggy synovium (pannus); restriction of range of motion, muscle atrophy (Very common); little or not joint damage on xray Treatment: often prophylactic factor replacment Synovectomy – radiation, chemical or surgical
  5. Children: epiphyses are involved resulting in growth disturbances of long bones.
  6. Second most common site of bleeds but less tendency for recurrent bleeds. Complications: Nerve compression – median, ulnar or femoral leading to transient or persistent sensory or motor impairment If not treated adequately or if there are repeated bleeds into the same area – fibrosis and soft tissue contracture; Some danger of compartment syndrome
  7. NB: not necessarily a lot of bleeding from minor superficial cuts and abrasions (platelet function is normal)
  8. Fresh whole blood: only treatment available prior to early 1950’s. If given within 24 hours of collection – contains all the clotting factors. Largely ineffective in providing enough factor because of the large volumes needed . Life saving measure or given prior to unavoidable surgery. Plasma Products: discovered in late 1940’s that plasma could be separated from cells and that fresh plasma had higher concentrations of factor than whole blood. Plasma could be given as a fresh product or frozen for later use. Volumes required were still very high – factor levels of 20-25% could be achieved. Fresh frozen plasma (FFP) – treatment of choice for both factor VIII and IX deficiency until approx 1964. Cryopecipitate: discovered that if plasma is frozen and then thawed most of the factor VIII remains in the sludge; this smaller quantity is then refrozen, stored for later use. Much less volume needed to treat factor VIII deficiency (one doner). Introduction of Cryoprecipitate coincided with beginning of home infusion – patients and families taught how to infuse at home – bleeds treated earlier. Some reduction in the joint damage due to recurrent bleeds. Concentrates: both factor VIII and IX concentrates became available in early 1970’s. Obtained by rapid freezing and dehydration of plasma; kept in refrigerator, reconstituted with saline and given by IV. 10,000 to 20,000 doners per batch of concentrate. Rapidly became the treatment of choice in the 1970’s; easier to store and to do home infusion; allowed prophylactic treatment (I.e. prior to a sporting event).
  9. PT along with other team members involved in educating family; Young child – parent does infusion; by age 10 – 12 most children can be taught to do this themselves. Joints need to be rested in the loose pack position – room for effusion Crutches or no weight bearing for lower extremity joint or muscle bleed Ice helps with resorption of fluid Need to be aware of complications – compartment syndrome or nerve compression in soft tissue bleeds
  10. Important to regain ROM and muscle strength after a bleed. Generally avoid splinting – except perhaps overnight to stretch soft tissues
  11. Maintenance of physical fitness and muscle strength is important to prevent joint bleeds. Soccer - ??? Footwear – good ankle support; high topped sneakers recommended