Intro to Bleeding - First Clues
- Bleeding Patterns:
- Mucocutaneous (petechiae, purpura, epistaxis, gingival): Suggests platelet defect or von Willebrand Disease (vWD).
- Deep tissue/Joint (hemarthrosis, hematoma): Suggests coagulation factor deficiency.
- Initial Lab Screen:
- Platelet Count (PC)
- Prothrombin Time (PT): Extrinsic & common pathways (Factors VII, X, V, II, Fibrinogen).
- Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (aPTT): Intrinsic & common pathways (Factors XII, XI, IX, VIII, X, V, II, Fibrinogen).
⭐ Isolated prolonged aPTT with bleeding often points to Hemophilia A (Factor VIII) or B (Factor IX).
Platelet Disorders - Sticky Situations
- Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)
- Anti-GpIIb/IIIa IgG. Acute (kids, post-viral) / Chronic.
- Sx: Petechiae, purpura. Dx: Isolated Plt < 100k/μL. Normal PT/APTT.
- Rx (Kids): Observe/Steroids (Plt < 20-30k/bleed)/IVIG.
- Rx (Adults): Steroids, IVIG, Anti-D, TPO-RAs, Splenectomy.
- Qualitative Disorders (↑BT)
- Bernard-Soulier Syndrome (AR): ↓GpIb. Giant platelets, mild thrombocytopenia. Ristocetin: ↓agg (no normal plasma fix). 📌 BS = Big Suckers.
⭐ Giant platelets on peripheral smear are a hallmark of Bernard-Soulier Syndrome.
- Glanzmann Thrombasthenia (AR): ↓GpIIb/IIIa. Agg: ↓(ADP, collagen), normal (ristocetin).
- Storage Pool Disease: Granule defect. Impaired 2° aggregation.
- Bernard-Soulier Syndrome (AR): ↓GpIb. Giant platelets, mild thrombocytopenia. Ristocetin: ↓agg (no normal plasma fix). 📌 BS = Big Suckers.
- Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (XLR)
- Triad: Thrombocytopenia (small platelets), Eczema, Recurrent infections. 📌 WATER. ↓IgM. oka
Coagulation Defects - Cascade Crumble
- Hallmarks: Deep tissue bleeding (e.g., hemarthrosis, intramuscular hematomas), delayed bleeding after trauma or surgery. Normal platelet count & Bleeding Time (BT).
- Lab Indicators: Prolonged Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (APTT) for intrinsic/common pathway defects. Prolonged Prothrombin Time (PT) for extrinsic/common pathway defects.
- Hemophilia A:
- Factor VIII deficiency; X-linked recessive inheritance.
- ↑ APTT, normal PT.
- Severity based on FVIII activity: Mild (>5%), Moderate (1-5%), Severe (<1%).
- Hemophilia B (Christmas Disease):
- Factor IX deficiency; X-linked recessive inheritance.
- ↑ APTT, normal PT. Clinically indistinguishable from Hemophilia A.
- Vitamin K Deficiency:
- Impaired synthesis of Factors II, VII, IX, X, Protein C & S.
- ↑ PT (Factor VII has shortest half-life: $4-6$ hours, affected first), then ↑ APTT.
- Causes: Neonates (Hemorrhagic Disease of Newborn - HDN), malabsorption, prolonged antibiotics.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Factors "1972" (X, IX, VII, II) + Protein C & S.

⭐ Mixing studies using normal plasma help differentiate: correction of PT/APTT indicates factor deficiency, while no correction suggests a factor inhibitor (e.g., antibody).
Acquired & Vascular - Unexpected Leaks
- Vitamin K Deficiency Bleeding (VKDB):
- ↑PT, ↑aPTT (Factors II, VII, IX, X ↓).
- Causes: Poor intake, malabsorption, maternal drugs.
- Rx: Vitamin K.
- Liver Disease:
- ↓Factor synthesis.
- Labs: ↑PT, ↑aPTT, ↓platelets.
- Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC):
- Triggers: Sepsis, trauma.
- Labs: ↑PT, ↑aPTT, ↓platelets, ↓fibrinogen, ↑D-dimer; schistocytes.
- Henoch-Schönlein Purpura (HSP) / IgA Vasculitis:
- Palpable purpura (buttocks, legs), arthritis, abdominal pain, renal.
- Normal platelets & coags.
⭐ HSP: Most common childhood vasculitis; often follows URI.

- Scurvy (Vit C def): Perifollicular hemorrhage, gum bleeding.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Hemophilia A & B: X-linked recessive; hemarthrosis, ↑aPTT, normal PT/BT.
- Von Willebrand Disease (vWD): Most common inherited; mucocutaneous bleeding, ↑BT, often ↑aPTT.
- Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP): Autoimmune isolated thrombocytopenia; post-viral, petechiae.
- DIC: Systemic coagulation activation; consumes platelets/factors; ↑PT/aPTT/BT, ↓platelets, ↑D-dimer.
- Vitamin K Deficiency: ↓Factors II, VII, IX, X, C, S; ↑PT/aPTT.
- Platelet Defects: Bernard-Soulier (GpIb, giant platelets); Glanzmann (GpIIb/IIIa). Both ↑BT.
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