What is aPTT?
The Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (aPTT) measures how long it takes blood plasma to clot after adding activators and phospholipid in the absence of tissue factor. This test specifically evaluates the intrinsic and common pathways of the coagulation cascade.
How Does the Test Work?
The aPTT test evaluates multiple clotting factors in a specific sequence:
- Intrinsic pathway activation: Contact activation of Factor XII → Factor XIIa → activates Factor XI
- Intrinsic cascade: Factor XIa → activates Factor IX → Factor IXa + Factor VIIIa → activates Factor X
- Common pathway: Factor Xa + Factor Va → converts prothrombin (Factor II) to thrombin → converts fibrinogen (Factor I) to fibrin clot
- aPTT measurement: Time from adding activator and phospholipid until visible clot forms
Understanding the Coagulation Cascade
The aPTT specifically tests the intrinsic pathway (contact activation) and common pathway:
- Intrinsic pathway factors: XII (Hageman), XI, IX (Christmas), VIII (Antihemophilic factor)
- Common pathway factors: X (Stuart-Prower), V (proaccelerin), II (prothrombin), I (fibrinogen)
- Heparin mechanism: Enhances antithrombin III, which inhibits Factors IIa (thrombin), Xa, IXa, XIa → prolongs aPTT
- Hemophilia defects: Hemophilia A (Factor VIII deficiency), Hemophilia B (Factor IX deficiency)
Clinical Uses of aPTT
- Heparin monitoring: Target aPTT 1.5-2.5× control for therapeutic anticoagulation (though anti-Xa now preferred)
- Hemophilia diagnosis: Prolonged aPTT with normal PT suggests Factor VIII or IX deficiency
- Preoperative screening: Identifies bleeding risk before surgery (though routine screening not recommended without bleeding history)
- Lupus anticoagulant: Paradoxically prolongs aPTT in vitro but increases clotting risk in vivo