Chapter 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Pathophysiologic categories of edema

A
  1. ) increased hydrostatic pressure
    - impaired venous return (CHF, ascites, venous obstruction (thrombous))
    - arteriolar dilatation (heat)
  2. ) Reduced plasma oncotic pressure:
    - nephrotic syndrome
    - liver cirrhosis
    - malnutrition
  3. )lymphatic obstruction
    - inflammatory, neoplastic, postsurgery/xrt
  4. ) sodium retention
    - excess salt intake
    - increased renal tubular reabsorption of sodium
    5) inflammation
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2
Q

Difference between hyperemia and congestion

A

Hyperemia: active process; arteriolar dilatation causes increased blood flow with engorgement of vessels with oxygenated blood
Congestion: passive due to reduced outflow of blood frm the tissue (bluish colour because red cell stasis and the accumulation of deoxygenated hemoglobin)

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3
Q

Steps of normal hemostasis

A
  1. ) Vasoconstriction (reflex neurogenic mechanisms and secretion of factors such as endothelin)
  2. ) Exposure of thrombogenic substances on exposed ECM results in platelet adherence and activation; active platelets secrete granules that recruit additional platelets and from a hemostatic plug: Primary hemostasis
  3. ) TF exposed at the site of injury acts with factor VII to initiate the coagulation cascade and produce thrombin, which cleaves circulating fibrinogen to fibrin and consolidates the platelet plug: Secondary hemostasis
  4. ) Polymerized fibrin and platelet form the permanent plug; at this point, counterreulgatory mechanisms (tPA) are set in motion to prevent excessive clotting
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4
Q

Anticoagulant effects of endothelium

A
  1. ) Antiplatelet: NO and prostacyclin 1 produced by endothelial cells empeded platelet adhesion
  2. ) Anticoagulant effects via heparin-like molecules, thrombomodulin and tissue factor pathway inhibitor
  3. ) Fibrinolytic effects: endothelial cells synthesize tPA that cleaves plasminogen to make plasmin which cleaves fibrin to degrade thrombi
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5
Q

Procoagulant effects of endothelium

A

1) Platelet effects: endothelial injury allows platelets to contact ECM and interact with vWF (a product of endothelial cells)
2. ) Procoagulant effects: endothelium synthesizes tissue factor in response to cytokines or bacterial endotoxin
3. ) Antifibrinolytic effects: endothelial cells secrete inhibitors of plasminogen activator (PAIs)

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6
Q

Effects of stasis

A
  • promote endothelial activation to produce procoagulants
  • disrupt laminar flow bringing platelets in contact with endothelium
  • prevent dilution and washout of clotting factors by lack of fresh flowing blood and lack of inflowing clotting inhibitors
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7
Q

Clinical examples of causes of stasis

A
  • atherosclerotic plaques (expose endothelial ECM and disrupt laminar flow)
  • aneurysms
  • dilated RV due to valve disease
  • acute MI with wall dysfunction
  • abnormal RBCs as in sickle cell disease with vascular occlusions
  • hyperviscosity (e.g. in polycythemia rubra vera)
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8
Q

Acquired causes of hypercoagulability

A
  • immobilization
  • MI
  • atrial fibrillation
  • tissue injury
  • cancer (release of procoagulant tumor products)
  • prosthetic cardiac valves
  • DIC
  • HIT (antibodies that recognize complexes of heparin and platelet factor 4 on platelets that when bound, cause activation, aggregation and consumption of platelets)
  • APLA syndrome (binding of antibodies to epitopes on plasma proteins such as prothrombin; may be secondary such as associated with lupus, or primary, which may be associated with drugs)
  • Lower risk: cardiomyopathy, OCP use, pregnancy, sickle cell anemia, nephrotic syndrome, smoking
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9
Q

Effects of PEs

A
  • sudden death, right heart failure (cor pulmonale) or cardiovascular collapse when the emboli obstruct >60% of pulmonary circulation
  • obstruction of medium-size arteries with vascular rupture can result in pulmonary hemorrhage (but not infarction due to lung’s dual blood supply)
  • multiple emboli over time may result in pulmonary hypertension and right heart failure
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10
Q

Features of fat embolism syndrome

A
  • pulmonary insufficiency
  • neurologic symptoms
  • anemia
  • thrmbocytopenia
  • fatal in up to 15% of cases
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11
Q

Define infarct

A

An area of ischemic necrosis caused by occlusion of either the arterial supply or the venous drainage

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12
Q

Red infarcts

A

-infarcts with venous occlusions, in loose tissues where blood can collect in the infarct, in tissues with dual circulation or when flow is reestablished

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13
Q

White infarcts

A

-arterial occlusions in solid organs where tissue density limits the seepage of blood into the necrotic area

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