Coagulation Studies: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Coagulation studies assess the function of the coagulation cascade and guide management of bleeding, anticoagulation, and coagulopathy in the ED<ref name="statpearls">Rountree KM, Lopez PP. Partial Thromboplastin Time. In: ''StatPearls''. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025. PMID 30252830.</ref> | *Coagulation studies assess the function of the coagulation cascade and guide management of bleeding, anticoagulation, and coagulopathy in the ED<ref name="statpearls">Rountree KM, Lopez PP. Partial Thromboplastin Time. In: ''StatPearls''. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025. PMID 30252830.</ref> | ||
*Standard panel includes: | *Standard panel includes: PT (prothrombin time), INR (international normalized ratio), and PTT/aPTT (activated partial thromboplastin time) | ||
*Additional coagulation-related tests include: | *Additional coagulation-related tests include: fibrinogen, D-dimer, thrombin time (TT), mixing studies, and anti-factor Xa levels | ||
*Collected in a '''citrate (blue top) tube''' — tube must be filled to the line; underfilling causes falsely prolonged results due to excess citrate | *Collected in a '''citrate (blue top) tube''' — tube must be filled to the line; underfilling causes falsely prolonged results due to excess citrate | ||
*Evidence suggests coagulation panels are frequently over-ordered in the ED with limited impact on management in many clinical scenarios<ref name="long">Long B, Liang SY, Koyfman A. Emergency medicine misconceptions: utility of routine coagulation panels in the emergency department setting. ''Am J Emerg Med''. 2021;41:149-153. PMID 32067862.</ref> | *Evidence suggests coagulation panels are frequently over-ordered in the ED with limited impact on management in many clinical scenarios<ref name="long">Long B, Liang SY, Koyfman A. Emergency medicine misconceptions: utility of routine coagulation panels in the emergency department setting. ''Am J Emerg Med''. 2021;41:149-153. PMID 32067862.</ref> | ||
Latest revision as of 09:34, 22 March 2026
Background
- Coagulation studies assess the function of the coagulation cascade and guide management of bleeding, anticoagulation, and coagulopathy in the ED[1]
- Standard panel includes: PT (prothrombin time), INR (international normalized ratio), and PTT/aPTT (activated partial thromboplastin time)
- Additional coagulation-related tests include: fibrinogen, D-dimer, thrombin time (TT), mixing studies, and anti-factor Xa levels
- Collected in a citrate (blue top) tube — tube must be filled to the line; underfilling causes falsely prolonged results due to excess citrate
- Evidence suggests coagulation panels are frequently over-ordered in the ED with limited impact on management in many clinical scenarios[2]
Components
PT / INR
- Assesses: Extrinsic and common pathways (Factors VII, X, V, II, fibrinogen)
- Normal PT: ~11–13.5 seconds (lab-dependent)
- Normal INR: 0.8–1.2
- Primary uses:
- Causes of prolonged PT/INR:
- Warfarin use
- Vitamin K deficiency (malnutrition, prolonged antibiotics, cholestasis)
- Liver disease/hepatic failure
- DIC
- Factor VII deficiency (isolated PT prolongation with normal PTT)
- Supratherapeutic anticoagulation
PTT / aPTT
- Assesses: Intrinsic and common pathways (Factors XII, XI, IX, VIII, X, V, II, fibrinogen)
- Normal aPTT: ~25–35 seconds (lab-dependent)
- Primary uses:
- Monitor unfractionated heparin (UFH) therapy
- Screen for hemophilia (Factor VIII or IX deficiency)
- Evaluate unexplained bleeding
- Detect lupus anticoagulant (paradoxically causes thrombosis, not bleeding)
- Causes of prolonged PTT:
- Heparin use (most common in ED)
- Hemophilia A (Factor VIII deficiency) or B (Factor IX deficiency)
- Von Willebrand Disease
- DIC
- Direct thrombin inhibitors (dabigatran, argatroban, bivalirudin)
- Lupus anticoagulant
- Severe liver disease
Fibrinogen
- Normal: 200–400 mg/dL
- Critical value: < 100 mg/dL (high bleeding risk)
- Acute phase reactant — may be falsely normal or elevated in early DIC or inflammatory states
- Decreased in: DIC (consumptive), massive transfusion (dilutional), severe liver disease, dysfibrinogenemia, thrombolytic therapy
- Key component of DIC screening panel
- Target > 150–200 mg/dL in active hemorrhage and obstetric emergencies[3]
D-Dimer
- Fibrin degradation product; marker of fibrinolysis
- Normal: < 500 ng/mL (age-adjusted cutoff: age × 10 ng/mL for patients > 50 years)
- Primary ED uses:
- Elevated in: VTE, DIC, sepsis, trauma, surgery, pregnancy, malignancy, inflammation, post-thrombolysis — very nonspecific
Thrombin Time (TT)
- Measures conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin (final common step)
- Normal: ~14–19 seconds
- Prolonged by: heparin, direct thrombin inhibitors (dabigatran), hypofibrinogenemia (< 100 mg/dL), dysfibrinogenemia, elevated fibrin degradation products
- Useful for detecting heparin contamination of specimens and confirming dabigatran effect
Anti-Factor Xa Level
- Uses:
- Monitor LMWH (enoxaparin) — therapeutic range 0.5–1.0 IU/mL (treatment dose); 0.2–0.5 IU/mL (prophylactic)
- Monitor UFH (increasingly used as alternative to aPTT)
- Some assays can estimate DOAC (rivaroxaban, apixaban) drug levels, but availability is limited
- Draw 4 hours post-dose for LMWH (peak level)
Interpretation Patterns
| PT/INR | PTT | Fibrinogen | D-Dimer | Likely Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ↑ | Normal | Normal | Normal | Warfarin, vitamin K deficiency, early liver disease, Factor VII deficiency |
| Normal | ↑ | Normal | Normal | Heparin, hemophilia A/B, vWD, lupus anticoagulant, Factor XI/XII deficiency |
| ↑ | ↑ | Normal | Normal | Common pathway defect (Factor X, V, II), liver disease, supratherapeutic anticoagulation, direct thrombin inhibitor |
| ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | ↑↑ | DIC (consumptive coagulopathy) |
| ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | Normal/↑ | Severe liver failure, massive transfusion (dilutional coagulopathy) |
| Normal | Normal | Normal | ↑ | VTE, inflammation, infection, malignancy, post-surgical (D-dimer alone is nonspecific) |
Evaluation
Appropriate ED Indications
- Active hemorrhage or hemodynamic instability from suspected bleeding
- Patients on anticoagulants (warfarin, heparin, DOACs) presenting with bleeding, trauma, or requiring urgent procedures
- Suspected DIC (order PT, PTT, fibrinogen, D-dimer, platelets)
- Severe sepsis/septic shock
- Liver failure or suspected hepatic coagulopathy
- Pre-thrombolytic assessment (stroke, STEMI, massive PE)
- Unexplained petechiae, purpura, or mucosal bleeding
- Massive transfusion protocol activation
===Low-Yield Indications (Consider NOT Ordering)===[2]
- Routine preoperative screening in patients without bleeding history
- Chest pain / ACS workup without planned anticoagulation or thrombolysis
- Simple laceration repair
- Before initiating anticoagulation in patients with no clinical bleeding
- Routine admission screening in well-appearing patients
Management
Warfarin Reversal (Elevated INR)
- INR 4.5–10, no bleeding: Hold warfarin; consider oral vitamin K 1–2.5 mg
- INR > 10, no bleeding: Hold warfarin; oral vitamin K 2.5–5 mg
- Serious/life-threatening bleeding (any INR): IV vitamin K 10 mg PLUS 4-factor PCC (Kcentra; dose based on INR and weight) — do not wait for vitamin K effect; PCC works within minutes[4]
- FFP (15–20 mL/kg) is second-line if PCC is unavailable — slower onset, larger volume
Heparin Reversal
- UFH: Protamine sulfate (1 mg per 100 units of heparin given in last 2–3 hours; max 50 mg)
- LMWH: Protamine partially reverses (~60%); 1 mg per 1 mg enoxaparin given in last 8 hours
DOAC Reversal
- Dabigatran: Idarucizumab (Praxbind) 5 g IV — specific reversal agent
- Rivaroxaban/Apixaban: Andexanet alfa (Andexxa) if available; otherwise 4-factor PCC (50 units/kg) as an off-label alternative[4]
- Activated charcoal if ingestion within 2 hours
DIC Management
- Treat underlying cause (sepsis, malignancy, obstetric emergency)
- Transfuse as indicated: platelets (if < 10,000 or < 50,000 with bleeding), cryoprecipitate (if fibrinogen < 100–150 mg/dL), FFP (if PT/PTT significantly prolonged with bleeding)
- Do NOT give heparin empirically — consider only in DIC with predominant thrombotic phenotype in consultation with hematology
Disposition
- Coagulopathy with active bleeding requires admission, often to ICU
- Supratherapeutic INR without bleeding may be managed with dose adjustment and close follow-up if patient is reliable
- New unexplained coagulopathy warrants admission for workup
- Patients on anticoagulants after trauma (especially head trauma) may require prolonged observation and repeat imaging regardless of initial coagulation results
See Also
- CBC
- DIC
- Warfarin
- Heparin
- Pulmonary Embolism
- DVT
- Hemophilia
- Von Willebrand disease
- Massive Transfusion
- Peripheral blood smear
- Liver failure
External Links
- Interpretation of Blood Clotting Studies and Values - StatPearls
- Coagulation Tests - EMCrit IBCC
- Emergency medicine misconceptions: utility of routine coagulation panels - Am J Emerg Med 2021
- 2020 ACC Expert Consensus on Management of Bleeding on Oral Anticoagulants - JACC 2020
References
- ↑ Rountree KM, Lopez PP. Partial Thromboplastin Time. In: StatPearls. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2025. PMID 30252830.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Long B, Liang SY, Koyfman A. Emergency medicine misconceptions: utility of routine coagulation panels in the emergency department setting. Am J Emerg Med. 2021;41:149-153. PMID 32067862.
- ↑ Adelborg K, Larsen JB, Hvas AM. Disseminated intravascular coagulation: epidemiology, biomarkers, and management. Br J Haematol. 2021;192(5):803-818. PMID 33555612.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Tomaselli GF, Mahaffey KW, Cuker A, et al. 2020 ACC expert consensus decision pathway on management of bleeding in patients on oral anticoagulants. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2020;76(5):594-622. PMID 32680646.
