A 7-year-old girl is being managed on the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit for severe sepsis. She develops widespread petechiae and purpura, and the nursing staff note persistent oozing from her intravenous cannula sites.
Urgent haematological investigations reveal a platelet count of 48 x 10^9/L, a prolonged prothrombin time, and a prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time. The fibrinogen level is low, and D-dimers are markedly elevated.
What is the central pathophysiological process driving this coagulopathy?
CORRECT ANSWER:
The clinical and laboratory findings are characteristic of Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC), a life-threatening condition frequently triggered by severe sepsis.
The central pathophysiological process is the systemic, uncontrolled activation of the coagulation cascade. Inflammatory cytokines and endotoxins from the septic focus cause widespread endothelial damage, exposing tissue factor and initiating massive thrombin generation.
This leads to the formation of microvascular thrombi throughout the circulation, which consumes coagulation factors (prolonging Prothrombin Time and Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time), fibrinogen, and platelets (thrombocytopenia). Simultaneously, the fibrinolytic system is activated to break down these clots, resulting in a surge of fibrin degradation products, including markedly elevated D-dimers.
This consumptive coagulopathy paradoxically causes both thrombosis and a severe bleeding diathesis, as evidenced by the petechiae, purpura, and oozing.
WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS:
Option B (Autoimmune destruction of platelets) is incorrect as this describes Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), which typically presents with isolated thrombocytopenia without deranging the PT, APTT, or fibrinogen.
Option C (Vitamin K deficiency) is incorrect because while it prolongs the PT and APTT, it does not cause the significant thrombocytopenia or massively elevated D-dimers seen in this case.
Option D (A specific deficiency of Factor VIII) is incorrect as this describes Haemophilia A, which would cause an isolated prolongation of the APTT, with a normal PT, platelet count, and fibrinogen level.
Option E (Toxin-mediated endothelial damage) is incorrect because this describes the pathophysiology of Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome (HUS), which causes a microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia and thrombocytopenia but does not typically involve a global consumption of coagulation factors.