14 Ischaemia infarction and shock Flashcards
Differentiate between hypoxia and ischaemia.
Hypoxia: any state of reduced tissue oxygen availability.
Ischaemia: pathological reduction in blood flow to tissues.
Why is reperfusion of non-infarcted but ischaemic tissues sometimes bad?
May cause repercussion injury. Inflammatory cells generate reactive oxygen species causing further cell damage.
What causes infarction?
Thrombosis, embolus.
Vasospasm, extrinsic compression, vessel root twisting, vascular supply rupture.
Venous occlusion.
Differentiate between red and white infarction.
Red: dual blood supply (lungs).
White: single blood supply (heart).
What shape are infarcts?
Wedge shaped.
What are the histological features of infarction?
Coagulative necrosis.
If brain = colliquative.
What factors influence the degree of ischaemic damage?
Nature of blood supply.
Rate of occlusion - collaterals.
Tissue vulnerability to hypoxia (brain:4mins, heart:30mins).
Blood oxygen content.
Which organs are particularly vulnerable to ischaemic damage?
Single supply: kidney, spleen, testis.
What causes gas gangrene?
A gas producing organism e.g. clostridium perfringens.
What are the cellular effects of shock?
Membrane ion pump dysfunction. Intracellular swelling. Intracellular content leakage. pH dysregulation. Lactic acid production.
What are the systemic effects of shock?
Serum pH changes.
Vascular leakage.
Stimulation of inflammatory cascades.
End-organ damage.
What are the classifications of shock?
Hypovolaemic.
Cardiogenic.
Distributive: anaphylactic, septic, TSS, neurogenic.
What are the causes of hypovolaemic shock?
Haemorrhage.
Non-hemorrhagic: D+V, heat stroke, burns, third spacing (acute loss of fluid into internal body cavities).
What are the categories of cardiogenic shock?
Myopathic (heart muscle failure).
Arrhythmia-related.
Mechanical (valvular/septal defects).
Extra-cardiac (obstruction to blood outflow).
What are the causes of extra-cardiac cardiogenic shock?
Massive PE.
Tension pneumothorax.
Severe constrictive pericarditis.
Pericardial tamponade.