hemostasis
physiologic process by which the body stops bleeding while maintaining blood in the fluid state within the blood vessels
3 properties:
- keeps blood circulating in fluid state
- produces controlled, localized clot when injured
- dissolves clot once wound has healed
formation of the platelet plug
primary hemostasis
stabilization of the platelet plug through the activation of coagulation factors to form fibrin
secondary hemostasis
hemostasis players
interactions between
thrombopoitein analogs
- eltrombopag
platelet production
cytokine influencers
molecular influencers
sometimes the earliest PLT progenitor detectable by morphology
megakaryoblast
acute megakaryoblastic leukemia
maturation from the megakaryoblast to mature megakaryocyte involves two main steps:
this is followed by shedding of PLTs in a process called thrombocytopoiesis
how is the abundant cytoplasm state of mature megakaryocytes reached?
through repeated rounds of endomitosis
what is endomitosis?
- increased DNA content and cytoplasm without cell separation into daughter cells
cytoplasmic maturation of megakaryocytes
thrombocytopoesis
PLT morphology
reticulated PLTs
PLT ultrastructure
peripheral zone
peripheral zone plasma membrane contains:
Sol-Gel Zone
- circumferential microtubules: > located just within PLT membrane > encase the PLT; maintain discoid shape - microfilaments > located within PLT cytoplasm > composed of actin and myosin > becomes contractile with activation shape change granule content release
organelle zone
dense tubular system (DTS) - derived from endoplasmic reticulum - sequestration of calcium > controls PLT contraction & activation via Ca++ release - site of eicosanoid synthesis
eicosanoid synthesis
alpha granules
- 50 to 80 granules/plt contents = - coagulation proteins = fibrinogen, factor V, VIII - vWF - PLT factor 4 - PLT derived growth factor - proteins!
dense granules
- 2--7 granules/plt contents = - ADP - ATP - Calcium - Mg - serotonin - small molecules!
primary hemostasis
platelet plug formation