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Haemophilias

  • Inherited disorders of the coagulation cascade
  • Haemophilia A – deficiency of factor VIII (MC)
  • Haemophilia B – deficiency of factor IX
  • X-linked recessive inheritance – women are carriers, men develop the disease

Clinical features

  • CF of haemophilia A + B are identical
  • Hemarthroses, muscle hematomas, soft tissue bleeding
  • Delayed but prolonged bleeding from cuts
  • Intracranial bleeding – even from minor head trauma
  • Severity of bleeding depends on the level of the deficient factor
  • Most pts have a family history of pathologic bleeding in males from the maternal side

Diagnosis

  • Prolonged aPTT (intrinsic system)
  • Normal PT (extrinsic system)
  • A + B can only be distinguished by a clotting factor assay (not by clinical features)

Treatment

  • Important to determine which factor is deficient
  • 4 phase treatment regime
  • For severe bleeding/major surgery factor levels should be 100% (minimum 50%)
  • Desmopressin acetate can be used as an adjuvant in mild Hemophilia A
    • Induces release of vWF and VIII from endothelial cells to temporarily raise level of VIII
  • Tranexamic acid – especially for dental procedures

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