Coagulation Testing
Appearance
PT/APTT
| PT | APTT | |
| Factors Affected | I, II, V, VII, X | All except VII - Congenital def. of VIII, IX, or XI - VWF disease → low VIII |
| Pathways Affected | Extrinsic and common | Intrinsic and common |
| Drugs Monitored | Coumadin (warfarin) | Heparin (unfractionated) |
| Conditions |
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| Interfering Factors |
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| RI |
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Reflex/Follow-up Testing
| Test (RI) | Info | Ordered When | |
| Thrombin Time (15-20s) | Assesses deficiencies or dysfunction of fibrinogen (Factor I) or thrombin (Factor II) inhibitor Less fibrinogen available → longer clot time |
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| Fibrinogen
(2.2-5.0 g/L) (Critical: <1.0g/L with increased PT, APTT, TT) |
Modified TT assay that estimates concentration of functional fibrinogen Clotting time correlates with active fibrinogen |
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| D-Dimer | Measures fibrin clot breakdown products from plasmin Elevated D-dimer alone is non-specific except in VTE - Can be associated with a variety of diseases or inflammatory states |
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| Mixing Studies | |||
| Inhibitor Testing | |||
| Factor Assays |
Abnormal Results
If PT/INR and APTT both prolonged
- Multiple factors in intrinsic and extrinsic pathways affected OR single factor deficiency in common pathway (I, II, V, or X [I if severe])
- Congenital:
- Single factor deficiency for factor I, II, V, or X
- Acquired:
- Multiple factor deficiency in intrinsic AND extrinsic pathways
- Severe liver disease
- Severe Vitamin K deficiency
- DIC
- Specific inhibitor directed to common pathway factor
- Hypofibrinogenemia/dysfibrinogenemia
- Massive hemmorage
- Congenital
- Fibrinolysis
- Multiple factor deficiency in intrinsic AND extrinsic pathways
If PT/INR is prolonged, but APTT is normal
- Probably related to factor VII
- Congenital single factor VII deficiency
- Acquired
- Early liver disease
- Early vitamin K deficiency
- Early coumadin therapy or initial dose
- Specific inhibitor to VII (rare)
If APTT is prolonged, but PT/INR is normal
- Probably related to intrinsic pathway factors VIII, IX, XI, or contact factors
- Congenital
- Single factor deficiency of VIII, IX, XI with bleeding (hemophilia A, B, or C respectively)
- VWD (can lead to factor VIII deficiency)
- Deficiency of factor XII, pre-K, HMWK (contact factors)
- Prolongs APTT but doesn’t result in clinically significant bleeding
- Acquired
- Non-specific inhibitor (e.g., antiphospholipid antibodies)
- Lupus anticoagulant in SLE patients
- Specific inhibitor against intrinsic factors
- Hemophilia patients may develop anti-FVIII or IX due to treatment
- Acquired hemophilia or acquired VWD
- Heparin therapy
- Non-specific inhibitor (e.g., antiphospholipid antibodies)
- Congenital
Causes of Abnormal Results + Followup Testing
| Test Affected | Cause | Disease States | Symptoms/Patient History | Pathways Affected | Followup Testing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BOTH PT and APTT | Single factor deficiency for I, II, V, or X | ||||
| Multiple factor deficiency in intrinsic AND extrinsic pathways | Severe liver disease | Jaundice, abdominal pain or tenderness |
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| Severe Vitamin K deficiency | |||||
| Disseminated intravascular coagulation | |||||
| Specific inhibitor to common pathway factor | |||||
| Hypofibrinogenemia/dysfibrinogenemia | |||||
| PT only | Factor VIII deficiency | Congenital single factor VII deficiency | |||
| Early liver disease | |||||
| Early Vitamin K deficiency | |||||
| Early coumadin therapy/initial dose | |||||
| Specific inhibitor to VIII (rare) | |||||
| APTT only | VWF disease |
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Factor VIII |
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| Hemophilia A, B, or C (single factor deficiency) |
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| Other congenital factor deficiencies | |||||
| Non-specific inhibitor | |||||
| Specific inhibitor against intrinsic factors | |||||
| Heparin therapy | |||||
Investigating Abnormal Results
- Check specimen integrity and HCT >55% (recollect and/or dilute)
- Check patient history for any conditions affecting coagulation. If present, report results:
- Anticoagulant therapy: warfarin/coumadin, heparin, direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs)
- Liver disease (early: PT, late: both PT/APTT)
- Vitamin K deficiency
- Known factor deficiency (single or multiple)
- Look for other causes and perform reflex testing
- Decreased fibrinogen → Thrombin time or fibrinogen assay
- Specific single or multiple factor deficiency
- Inhibitor or antibody to factors
- Inhibitor or antibody interfering with test