TBI Associated Coagulopathy
Definition
TBI-associated coagulopathy refers to any abnormality in coagulation parameters (PT/INR, aPTT, platelet function, fibrinogen, or viscoelastic tests) occurring early after TBI, attributable directly to brain injury–induced pathophysiologic mechanisms.
Epidemiology & Clinical Importance
- Occurs in 25–60% of moderate–severe TBI
- Can be present on arrival to ED
- Strongly associated with:
- Progressive intracranial hemorrhage
- Raised ICP
- Need for neurosurgical intervention
- Increased mortality (2–4×)
Pathophysiology
TBI-AC is multifactorial and evolves over time.
1. Tissue Factor (TF) Release – Initiating Event
- Brain tissue is rich in tissue factor
- TBI → disruption of blood–brain barrier → massive TF release
- TF activates extrinsic coagulation pathway
- Leads to thrombin burst
# Key exam line:
The brain is the most thrombogenic organ in the body.
2. Consumptive Coagulopathy
- Excess thrombin → widespread clot formation
- Consumption of:
- Fibrinogen
- Platelets
- Coagulation factors
- Results in secondary hypocoagulability
3. Hyperfibrinolysis
- Endothelial injury → release of tPA
- Excess plasmin generation
- Rapid clot breakdown
Manifestations:
- Low fibrinogen
- Elevated D-dimer
- Poor clot strength on TEG/ROTEM
# Important:
Early TBI is often hyperfibrinolytic, later phases may become hypofibrinolytic / shutdown.
4. Protein C Pathway Activation
- Thrombin–thrombomodulin complex activates protein C
- Activated protein C:
- Inhibits factors Va and VIIIa
- Suppresses PAI-1 → ↑ fibrinolysis
This explains:
- Anticoagulation + hyperfibrinolysis simultaneously
5. Platelet Dysfunction (Even with Normal Count)
- Platelets become functionally impaired
- Poor aggregation and adhesion
- Not detected by routine platelet count
# Exam pearl:
Normal platelet count does NOT exclude platelet dysfunction in TBI.
6. Endothelial Glycocalyx Shedding
- Catecholamine surge → endothelial damage
- Loss of glycocalyx → auto-heparinization
- Results in endogenous anticoagulation
7. Secondary Aggravating Factors
These worsen but do not initiate TBI-AC:
- Hypothermia
- Acidosis
- Hemodilution
- Shock / hypoperfusion
Temporal Evolution of TBI-AC
|
Phase |
Coagulation Pattern |
|
Early (minutes–hours) |
Hypercoagulability + hyperfibrinolysis |
|
Intermediate |
Consumptive hypocoagulopathy |
|
Late (24–72 h) |
Fibrinolysis shutdown, microthrombosis |
Laboratory Findings
Conventional Tests
- ↑ PT / INR
- ↑ aPTT
- ↓ fibrinogen
- Platelet count: normal or ↓ (function impaired)
# Limitations:
- Poor sensitivity for early platelet dysfunction
- Delayed results
Viscoelastic Tests
TEG / ROTEM findings:
- Prolonged R time → factor deficiency
- Reduced MA → platelet dysfunction
- Increased LY30 → hyperfibrinolysis
# Exam point:
Viscoelastic testing allows goal-directed transfusion in TBI.
Clinical Consequences
- Expansion of intracranial hematoma
- New hemorrhagic lesions
- Raised ICP
- Failure of surgical hemostasis
- Increased mortality
Management Principles (Guideline-Based, Exam-Focused)
1. Early Recognition
- Screen all moderate–severe TBI
- Do not wait for massive bleeding
2. Avoid Secondary Insults
- Maintain:
- Normothermia
- pH > 7.30
- Ionized calcium normal
3. Targeted Blood Component Therapy
|
Abnormality |
Treatment |
|
INR > 1.5 |
FFP or PCC |
|
Fibrinogen < 150–200 mg/dL |
Cryoprecipitate / fibrinogen concentrate |
|
Platelet dysfunction |
Platelet transfusion |
|
Hyperfibrinolysis |
Tranexamic acid (early) |
4. Tranexamic Acid (TXA)
- Most effective if given within 3 hours
- Benefit seen mainly in:
- Mild–moderate TBI
- Hyperfibrinolytic states
# Avoid late indiscriminate use (risk of thrombosis).
5. Neurosurgical Considerations
- Correct coagulopathy before surgery
- Maintain platelets >100,000/µL for neurosurgery
- INR preferably <1.4
|
Feature |
TBI-Associated Coagulopathy (TBI-AC) |
Trauma-Induced Coagulopathy (TIC) |
|
Primary trigger |
Brain injury itself |
Systemic trauma + shock |
|
Shock required |
Not required |
Usually present |
|
Tissue factor source |
Brain (very TF-rich) |
Injured tissues (muscle, endothelium) |
|
Onset |
Minutes–hours (very early) |
Early but linked to hypoperfusion |
|
Key mechanism |
TF surge, protein C activation, hyperfibrinolysis, platelet dysfunction |
Hypoperfusion → protein C activation, consumption, dilution |
|
Platelet count |
Often normal |
Often reduced |
|
Platelet function |
Severely impaired |
Less prominent |
|
Fibrinolysis |
Marked early hyperfibrinolysis |
Variable |
|
Occurs in isolated injury |
Yes |
No |
|
Example |
Isolated severe TBI |
Polytrauma with hemorrhagic shock |
Exam –
- TBI-AC is primary and brain-driven
- Can occur without systemic shock
- Platelet function matters more than count
- Early phase often hyperfibrinolytic
- Viscoelastic testing is superior to PT/INR
- Early TXA only — timing is critical

