Hemophilia
Background
- Two types (clinically indistinguishable):
- Hemophilia A: Factor VIII deficiency
- Hemophilia B: Factor IX deficiency
- Substantial proportion of both types arise from spontaneous mutations
- ICH is most common cause of hemorrhagic death
- Never give NSAIDs or IM injections
- Consult hematology if pt has h/o inhibitors
Diagnosis
- Easy bruising or bleeding out of proportion to the history of trauma
- Recurrent bleeding into joints and muscles
- Iliopsoas hemorrhage requires aggressive treatment (80-100% factor replacement)
- Hematuria
- Common but typically not severe
- ICH
- May not be apparent immediately after head injury (slow ooze)
Work-Up
- Coags
- Only helpful for making the dx; once established unlikely to yield new information
- PT - normal
- PTT - abnormal (unless mild hemophilia)
- Head CT
- If c/o HA, AMS, sig. flunt head injury
- CT A/P
- Back, thigh, groin, or abd pain
Treatment
Factor Replacement
- FFP if dx is unknown (contains VIII and IX)
- Each bag raises factor levels by 3-5%
- Factor replacement if dx is known
- Dose of Factor VIII = weight (kg) x % increased desired x 0.5
- After initial correction give half this dose q8-12hr
- 1 IU/kg will increase the plasma concentration by 2%
- Dose of Factor IX = weight (kg) x % increase desired
- After initial correction give half this dose 24 hr later
- 1 IU/kg will increase the plasma concentration by 1%
- Dose of Factor VIII = weight (kg) x % increased desired x 0.5
Specific Therapy
| TYPE OF BLEEDING | INITIAL DOSAGE | DURATION | COMMENT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin | |||
| Abrasion | None | None | Treat with local pressure and topical thrombin |
| Laceration | Usually none; if necessary, treat as minor | None | Local pressure and anesthetic with epinephrine may benefit; watch 4 hours after suturing; reexamine in 24 hours |
| Superficial | |||
| Deep | Minor bleeding (12.5 mg/kg) | Single-dose coverage | May need hospitalization for observation; repeat may be necessary for suture removal |
| Nasal epistaxis | |||
| Spontaneous | Usually none; may need to be treated as mild bleeding | None | Uncommon; consider platelet inhibition; treat in usual manner |
| Traumatic | Moderate bleeding (25 mg/kg) | Up to 5–7 days | Trauma-related bleeding can be significant |
| Oral | |||
| Mucosa or tongue bites | Usually none; treat as minor if persists | Single dose | Commonly seen |
| Traumatic (laceration) or dental extraction | Moderate (25 U/kg) to severe (50 U/kg) | Single dose; may need more | Saliva rich in fibrin lytic activity; oral ε-aminocaproic acid (Amicar) may be given at 100 mg every 6 hr for 7 days to block fibrinolysis; check contraindications; hospitalize patients with severe bleeding |
| Soft tissue/muscle hematomas | Moderate (25 U/kg) to severe (50 U/kg) | 2–5 days | May be complicated by local pressure on nerves or vessels (e.g., iliopsoas, forearm, calf) |
| Hemarthrosis | |||
| Early | Mild (12.5 U/kg) | Single dose | Treat as earliest symptom (pain); knee, elbow, ankle more common |
| Late or unresponsive cases of early hemarthrosis | Mild to moderate (25 U/kg) | 3–4 days | Arthrocentesis rarely necessary and only with 50% level coverage; immobilization is critical point of therapy |
| Hematuria | Mild (12.5 U/kg) | 2–3 days | Urokinase, the fibrinolytic enzyme, is in urine; with persistent hematuria an organic cause should be ruled out |
| Major bleeding | Major bleeding (50 U/kg) | 7–10 days or 3–5 days after bleeding ceases | In head trauma, therapy should be given prophylactically; early CT scan of head recommended for all |
Source
Tintinalli, Rosens
