18 Clinical edema Flashcards
Starling forces that promote movement into extravascular space
capillary hydrostatic pressure
tissue fluid oncotic pressure
Promote movement of fluid into the vascular compartment
Tissue hydrostatic pressure
Capillary plasma oncotic pressure
Occurrence of edema
1 elevation of venous pressure (obstruction of venous/lymph drainage)
2 decrease in capillary plasma oncotic pressure (hypoalbuminemia)
Pertinent information in edema
Location Timing Setting of the swelling Associated symptoms Drug intake
Pitting edema
soft, bilateral with pitting on pressure
no skin thickening, ulceration, or pigmentation
CHF, nephrotic syndrome, liver cirrhosis, malnutrition, drug intake, chronic venous insufficiency
Non-pitting edema (lymphedema)
hard and non-pitting, tight, rubbery
thickened skin, unilateral or bilateral
no drainage in angiogram
lymphedema or lymphatic obstruction
Facial and periorbital edema
heart failure, copd, glomerulonephritis, cirrhosis, hypothyroidism, grave’s disease
allergy: capillary leak syndrome (dilation of capillaries)
Damage to capillary endothelium
increased permeability
causes: drugs, viral/bacterial agents, thermal/mechanical trauma, hypersensitivity reaction, inflammatory edema (allergy)
Localized edema
1 Inflammation of the site (infaction, angioedema, contact allergy)
2 Metabolic causes (gout)
3 Venous insufficiency/thrombosis /compression
4 Chemical burn/physical injury
Bilateral edema:
above the diaphragm = SVC obstruction (pulmonary masses or severe tuberculosis)
below the diaphragm = CHF, portal hypertension, IVC obstruction, loss of venous tone (antihypertension or vasodilators)
Generalized edema
1 hypoalbuminemia
2 Inc capillary permeability (sepsis)
3 Renal retention of salt and water
Mechanisms to restore blood volume
Dec EABV -> intrarenal baroreceptors and macula densa receptors -> inc renin secretion
angiotensin II: inc peripheral resistance (vasoconstriction), inc cardiac output, inc Na and H2O retention = inc abp
Cirrhosis
block in hepatic venous outflow -> inc hepatic lymph formation
Intrahepatic hypertension: stimulus for renal Na retention and reduction of eabv, can cause ascites
Hypoalbuminemia: lowers capillary oncotic pressure -> fluid moves out -> dec eabv -> activate RAAS -> edema
Drug induced edema
Renal vasoconstriction (nsaids, cyclosporine, antihypertensives) Arteriolar dilatation Augmented renal sodium reabsorption (steroid hormones) Capillary damage