Coagulation Profile Interpretation
Standard Coagulation Tests
|
Test |
Pathway / What It Measures |
Factors Assessed |
Normal Value |
Clinical Use / Where Important |
|
PT (Prothrombin Time) |
Extrinsic + Common pathway |
VII, X, V, II, I |
11–14 sec |
Warfarin monitoring, liver disease, vitamin K deficiency |
|
INR |
Standardized PT |
Same as PT |
0.8–1.2 (normal) Therapeutic: 2–3 |
Warfarin monitoring |
|
aPTT |
Intrinsic + Common pathway |
XII, XI, IX, VIII, X, V, II, I |
25–35 sec |
Heparin therapy, hemophilia |
|
Platelet Count |
Primary hemostasis |
Platelets |
150,000–450,000/µL |
Bleeding risk, DIC |
|
Bleeding Time (BT) |
Platelet function + vascular integrity |
Platelet adhesion/aggregation |
2–7 min |
vWD, platelet dysfunction (rarely used now) |
|
Clotting Time (CT) |
Whole blood clot formation (intrinsic pathway) |
All intrinsic factors |
5–11 min (Lee-White method) |
Obsolete test; severe factor deficiency |
|
Activated Clotting Time (ACT) |
Whole blood clot time after activator |
Intrinsic + common |
90–120 sec |
High-dose heparin monitoring (cardiac surgery, ECMO) |
|
Fibrinogen |
Final substrate for clot formation |
Factor I |
200–400 mg/dL |
DIC, liver failure, massive transfusion |
|
D-dimer |
Fibrinolysis (cross-linked fibrin breakdown) |
Degraded fibrin fragments |
< 0.5 µg/mL (FEU) |
DIC, VTE rule-out |
|
Thrombin Time (TT) |
Fibrinogen → fibrin conversion |
Fibrinogen |
14–18 sec |
Heparin effect, dysfibrinogenemia |
Stepwise Approach to Interpretation
STEP 1: Check Platelet Count
- ↓ Platelets → primary hemostasis problem
- Normal platelets + bleeding → think coagulation defect
STEP 2: Look at PT and aPTT Pattern
🔷 Pattern 1: Isolated Prolonged PT
Causes:
- Early vitamin K deficiency
- Warfarin therapy
- Early liver disease
- Factor VII deficiency
Mechanism:
- Factor VII has shortest half-life (~6 hrs)
High-yield point:
PT rises first in liver failure.
🔷 Pattern 2: Isolated Prolonged aPTT
Causes:
- Hemophilia A (Factor VIII deficiency)
- Hemophilia B (Factor IX deficiency)
- Heparin therapy
- Lupus anticoagulant
- Severe vWD (low VIII)
Clinical differentiation:
- Bleeding → hemophilia
- Thrombosis → lupus anticoagulant
🔷 Pattern 3: Both PT and aPTT Prolonged
Causes:
- Advanced liver disease
- DIC
- Vitamin K deficiency (late)
- Massive transfusion
- Severe factor deficiencies (X, V, II, fibrinogen)
This suggests common pathway involvement.
🔷 Pattern 4: Normal PT & aPTT with Bleeding
Think:
- Platelet dysfunction (uremia, antiplatelets)
- vWD
- Mild factor XIII deficiency
- Connective tissue disorders
5️⃣ Mixing Study Interpretation
Why Perform Mixing Study?
To differentiate:
- Factor deficiency
- Inhibitor presence
Method:
Mix patient plasma 1:1 with normal plasma.
Interpretation:
|
Result |
Meaning |
|
Corrects |
Factor deficiency |
|
Does not correct |
Inhibitor present |
Common inhibitors:
- Lupus anticoagulant
- Factor VIII inhibitor
- Heparin contamination
7️⃣ Thrombin Time (TT)
Prolonged in:
- Heparin therapy
- Dysfibrinogenemia
- Severe liver disease
- DIC
If TT prolonged but reptilase time normal → heparin effect.
8️⃣ Fibrinogen Interpretation
Normal: 200–400 mg/dL
Low in:
- DIC
- Liver failure
- Massive transfusion
High in:Fibrinogen is an acute phase reactant.
- Acute phase response
- Pregnancy
- Inflammation
9️⃣ D-Dimer Interpretation
Elevated in:
- DIC
- PE
- DVT
- Sepsis
- Post-op
- Trauma
Important:High sensitivity, low specificity.
Never diagnose VTE on D-dimer alone in ICU.
🔟 Massive Transfusion Coagulopathy
Triad:
- Dilutional thrombocytopenia
- Hypofibrinogenemia
- Factor depletion
Lab:
- ↑ PT
- ↑ aPTT
- ↓ Platelets
- ↓ Fibrinogen
🔵 Activated Clotting Time (ACT)
What it is:
- Whole blood bedside test
- Uses surface activator (celite/kaolin)
- Used in high-dose heparin states
Where Important:
- Cardiac surgery
- ECMO
- Cardiopulmonary bypass
- Interventional cardiology
Therapeutic Targets:
- Cardiac surgery: > 400–480 sec
- ECMO: 180–220 sec (institution dependent)
ACT is unreliable at low heparin levels → use aPTT or anti-Xa instead.
🔵 Clotting Time (CT)
Old Lee-White method.
Measures:
- Time for whole blood to clot in glass tube.
Limitations:
- Poor reproducibility
- Replaced by PT/aPTT
Rarely used today.
🔵 Bleeding Time (BT)
Measures:
- Platelet function
- vWF interaction
- Capillary integrity
Prolonged in:
- Thrombocytopenia
- vWD
- Uremia
- Aspirin use
Now replaced by:
- Platelet function analyzer (PFA-100)
- Aggregometry
6️⃣ Disease-Specific Patterns
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
Lab Pattern:
- ↓ Platelets
- ↑ PT
- ↑ aPTT
- ↓ Fibrinogen
- ↑ D-dimer
- Schistocytes
Mechanism:
Consumption of clotting factors + secondary fibrinolysis.
Liver Disease
Lab Pattern:
- ↑ PT (early)
- ↑ aPTT (late)
- ↓ Fibrinogen (late)
- ↓ Platelets (hypersplenism)
- Elevated INR
Important concept:Rebalanced hemostasis — both pro and anti-coagulant factors reduced.
Vitamin K Deficiency
Causes:
- Malnutrition
- Obstructive jaundice
- Antibiotics
- Newborn
Lab:
- ↑ PT first
- Later ↑ aPTT
Corrects with vitamin K.
von Willebrand Disease
Entity:
von Willebrand disease
Lab:
- Normal PT
- Normal or ↑ aPTT
- Normal platelet count
- ↑ Bleeding time
Mechanism:
vWF stabilizes factor VIII.
Antiphospholipid Syndrome
Entity:
Antiphospholipid syndrome
Lab:
- ↑ aPTT
- No correction on mixing
- Thrombosis clinically
Paradox:
Prolonged clotting time but hypercoagulable.

