9 - Thrombosis and Embolism Flashcards
What is the definition of a thrombosis?
Solid mass of blood within vessels or the heart (circulatory system)
What is Virchow’s triad?
- Thrombosis depends on three things: changes in vascular wall, blood flow and changes in blood
- Only need two of three for thrombosis
Why are you at risk of thrombosis in pregnancy?
- Hypercoagulable blood and stasis due to pressure on large veins of pelvis by uterus
Give some examples of endothelial damage and how they can cause a thrombus?
- Hypertension, scarred heart valves all are causing endothelial damage and if blood flow is slow not swift, thrombus will form
- This is due to vWF being exposed
Why does slow or turbulent flow lead to thrombosis?
- Gives platelets better chance to stick to endothelium and for clotting factors to accumulate
- Can damage endothelium leading to two of three of Virchow’s triad
- More likely to occur in veins and blood flow is slower
What are some conditions that lead to hypercoagulability of the blood?
- Smoking
- Pregnancy
- Post-op
- OC pill
- Inherited disorders
How would you describe this thrombus and where is it most commonly found?
- Platelets aggregate at the endothelium as they are small so carried along outside
- Lines of Zahn: white layer of platelets crosslinking by fibrin with red layer of red blood cells
- More obvious in arterial thrombi as blood flows over surface
What do thrombi look like post mortem?
- Not laminated
- Rubbery and shiny and not attached to intima
- Need to be able to distinguish if cause of death or not
What is thrombophlebitis?
Painful superficial thrombi in veins that have inflammation in the wall of the vein
What are the two classification of thrombi?
- Parietal: attached to wall of vessels and restrict lumen
- Occlusive: fill and completely obstruct lumen. mainly occurs over atheroscelrotic plaque
What is a thrombus on a heart valve called and what is the complications with it?
- Vegetation
- Easily embolises
- Can become infected, particularly in IV drug users due to microtrauma
- Mainly form on left heart valve because higher pressures and more microtrauma
What are the different outcomes of thrombi?
- Resolution: dissolved by lysis
- Propagation: thrombus grows
- Organisation: thrombus undergoes fibrous repair and forms scar on vessel wall
- Recanalisation: new channels run through occluding thrombus to restore blood flow but less blood than original can flow through
- Embolism: particularly in large veins of lower limb are dangerous when part of thrombus breaks off, thrombo-emoblism
Why do thrombi propagate as they move through veins?
- Veins get larger as you move upwards towards the heart
- Stagnation in the blood above the clot and when tributaries join they join abnormal flow so contribute to clot
What are the effects of thrombosis?
- Ischaemia and infarct due to occlusion
- Embolisation
- Congestion and oedema leading to pain and skin ulceration
- Repeated miscarriages due to thrombosis in uteroplacental often seen in inherited thrombophilias
What is an embolism?
Blockage of a blood vessel by solid, liquid or gas at a site distant from its origin due to blood current
e.g air, amniotic fluid, nitrogen, thromboemboli, body fat, medical equipment
Why can’t embolism occur in veins?
- Blood flows from smaller to larger vessels, therefore they will go to right heart and embolise in pulmonary arteries