Specific Management Considerations
- Hemarthrosis:
- Splint, ace, ice
- Arthrocentesis is rarely indicated
- Muscle hemorrhage:
- Forearm/calf—consider compartment syndrome
- Psoas hematoma—groin pain, femoral nerve paresthesias
- Post tooth extraction or oral mucosal bleeding:
- Treat locally with collagen sponge (Avitene) or other hemostatic agent.
- Replace factor if severe.
- Aminocaproic acid (Amicar) or tranexamic acid (Cyklokapron) may be useful.
- Hematuria (generally mild):
- Hydrate
- Avoid Amicar and cryoprecipitate.
- Intracranial hemorrhage:
- All head injuries should be considered significant, especially in children.
- Do not delay therapy for CT head.
- GI bleeding:
- Secondary to ulcers, polyps, hemorrhoids
- Replace factor prior to endoscopy.
MEDICATION
To calculate doses for recombinant and plasma-derived factor VIII and factor IX concentrates refer to section Approach to Factor Replacement above.
Patient without Inhibitors
- First line: Recombinant factor
- Recombinant factor VIII options: Recombinate, Kogenate, Advate, Helixate FS, Xyntha
- Recombinant factor IX options: BeneFIX
- Second line: Plasma-derived factor
- Plasma-derived factor VIII high-purity concentrates: Monoclate-P, Hemofil-M, Koate DVI, Alphanate
- Plasma-derived factor VIII intermediate-purity concentrates: Humate
- Only use when previous options are not available.
- Plasma-derived factor IX high-purity concentrates: AlphaNine, Mononine
- Other options
- Cryoprecipitate (useful only in hemophilia A):
- Obtained from FFP after thawing at 4°C
- Contains factor VIII, vWF, fibrinogen
- Estimated 80–100 U of factor VIII in 1 U of cryoprecipitate
- Give 10 bags initially, peds dose 1 bag/6 kg
- Only if factor VIII concentrates are not available
- FFP (contains factors VIII and IX):
- 1 U of FFP contains about 200–300 U each of both factor VIII and factor IX
- 1 U of FFP will raise factor level 5–10% in a 60 kg person
- Readily available in most EDs; useful in life-threatening bleeds when access to specific factor treatment is delayed
- Adjunct to factor therapy: DDAVP (only in hemophilia A)
- Raises factor VIII level 2–3 times (only use in patients with mild hemophilia, and only with mild bleeds)
- Side effects: Mild flushing, headache, tachycardia, hypotension, hyponatremia
- Dose 0.3 μg/kg of DDAVP diluted in 50 mL 0.9% NS given over 15–30 min given IV or SC (intranasal “Stimate” 1 spray each nostril if >50 kg)
- Should not be used in children <1 yr old
- Adjunct to factor therapy: Antifibrinolytic agents (for mild bleeds)
- Inhibit plasmin activity, prevents clot lysis
- Only for mucosa/oral/dental bleeding
- Do not use in children.
- Examples: Aminocaproic acid (Amikar) 75 mg/kg every 6 hr up to 4 g or tranexamic acid (Cyklokapron) 25 mg/kg every 8 hr.
- Adjunct to factor therapy: Topical thrombin
- Useful for localized control of bleeding from lacerated superficial tissues
Patient with Inhibitors
- First line: Recombinant factor VIIa (NovoSeven)
- 90–120 μg/kg every 2–3 hr
- Higher doses of up to 300 μg/kg may promote thrombin formation and stabilize fibrin clot in the case of inefficient hemostasis
- Bypasses the coagulation cascade and works locally, decreasing risk for systemic coagulation
- Strong safety profile, minimal risk of inhibitor development, expensive
- Second line: Activated prothrombin complex concentrates (APCCs)
- Examples: FEIBA and Autoplex-T
- Dose: 75–100 U/kg every 8–12 hr
- Contains VIIa, IXa, and Xa
- Bypasses coagulation cascade
- Thromboembolic events occur with higher doses: DVT, PE, acute MI, DIC
- Other options
- Use high-dose recombinant or plasma-derived factor concentrates (2–3 times normal range) in those who have low antibody titers (low responders)
- Porcine factor VIII is now off the market
ALERT
- Avoid all IM injections of factor concentrates
- Avoid aspirin and aspirin-containing products
- Replace factor before any imaging, consultations, invasive procedures, or hospital transfers
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Low threshold for admission
- All joint/muscle bleeds, internal bleeding, severe bleeds
- Bleeding that may require multiple transfusions
- Severe complications or any head trauma
Discharge Criteria
Minor soft tissue bleeding, superficial lacerations with resolution/control of bleeding
Issues for Referral
Hematology for all bleeds
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Hematologist as outpatient
- Return to ER for recurrent bleeding episodes
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Do not wait for a head CT before treatment in the setting of head trauma
- In a suspected bleeding emergency in a patient with unknown clotting factor level, assume the level to be 0 and treat as a severe bleed
- Be familiar with different factor replacement therapies for patients with and without inhibitors
- Consult hematologist for appropriate dosing in ER, length of treatment, inhibitor vs. noninhibitor treatment
- Have a low threshold for admission
ADDITIONAL READING
- Berntrop E, Shapiro AD. Modern haemophilia care.
Lancet
. 2012;379(9824):1447–1456.
- Franchini M, Lippi G. The use of desmopressin in acquired haemophilia A: A systematic review.
Blood Transfus.
2011;9:377–382.
- Hay CR, Brown S, Collins PW, et al. The diagnosis and management of factor VIII and IX inhibitors: A guideline from the United Kingdom Haemophilia Centre Doctors Organization.
Br J Haematol.
2006;133:591–605.
- Kempton CL, White GC 2nd. How we treat a hemophilia A patient with a factor VIII inhibitor.
Blood
. 2009;113:11–17.
- Key NS, Negrier C. Coagulation factor concentrates: Past, present, future.
Lancet
. 2007;370:439–448.
- Pipe SW. Recombinant clotting factors.
Thromb Haemost
. 2008;99:840–850.
- Singleton T, Kruse-Jarres R, Leissinger C. Emergency Department care for patients with hemophilia and von Willibrand disease.
J Emerg Med
. 2010;39(2):158–165.
CODES
ICD9
- 286.0 Congenital factor VIII disorder
- 286.1 Congenital factor IX disorder
ICD10
- D66 Hereditary factor VIII deficiency
- D67 Hereditary factor IX deficiency
HEMOPTYSIS
Amy Kiraly
•
Peter S. Pang
•
Navneet Cheema
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Expectoration of blood originating from the tracheobronchial tree
- Source of bleeding:
- Bronchial arteries (90%), usually causes profuse bleeding
- Pulmonary arteries (5%), usually causes small amounts of bleeding
- Nonbronchial arteries (5%) including intercostal arteries, coronary arteries, thoracic, upper, and inferior phrenic arteries
- Threshold of massive hemoptysis defined has been defined from 100 mL to 1 L/24 hr:
- >8 mL/kg/day in children
- Most common definition is >300–600 mL/24 hr
- Mortality:
- Massive hemoptysis (>500 mL/24 hr): 38%
- Trivial to moderate hemoptysis (<500 mL/24 hr): 4.5%
- Malignancy and coagulopathy increase the risk of mortality
ETIOLOGY
- Infectious (most common cause):
- Acute or chronic bronchitis
- Pneumonia
- Necrotizing pneumonia or lung abscess (
Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae
)
- Tuberculosis
- Viral (influenza, varicella)
- Fungal (Aspergillus
,
Coccidioides
,
Histoplasma
,
Blastomyces)
- Parasitic (Ascariasis, Amebiasis, Paragonimiasis, Echinococcus)
- Neoplastic:
- Squamous cell, small cell, carcinoid
- Bronchogenic carcinoma
- Metastatic disease
- Pulmonary:
- Bronchiectasis
- Pulmonary embolism/infarction
- Cystic fibrosis
- Bronchopleural fistula
- Sarcoidosis
- Cardiac:
- Mitral stenosis
- Tricuspid endocarditis
- Heart failure
- Systemic disease:
- Goodpasture syndrome
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Vasculitis (Wegener granulomatosis, Henoch–Schönlein purpura, Behcçet disease)
- Hematologic:
- Coagulopathy
- Thrombocytopenia
- Platelet dysfunction
- DIC
- Vascular:
- Pulmonary HTN
- Arteriovenous malformation
- Aortic aneurysm
- Pulmonary artery aneurysm (Rasmussen aneurysm, mycotic, arteritis)
- Aortobronchial fistula
- Drugs/toxins:
- Aspirin/antiplatelet therapy
- Anticoagulants
- Penicillamine, amiodarone, propylthiouracil, bevacizumab
- Cocaine (“crack”) lung
- Organic solvents
- Trauma:
- Tracheobronchial rupture
- Pulmonary contusion
- Iatrogenic:
- Bronchoscopy/lung biopsy
- Pulmonary artery or central venous catheterization
- Transtracheal aspirate
- Miscellaneous:
- Foreign-body aspiration
- Catamenial hemoptysis (pulmonary endometriosis)
- Amyloidosis
- Idiopathic or cryptogenic (between 5% and 30%, depending on patient population)