Embolism, infarction, shock Flashcards
what is an embolus
a mass of material in he vascular system able to BECOME LODGED within a vessel and BLOCK ITS LUMEN
what is the most common embolism
PULMONARY EMBOLISM (from DVT)
what are sources of embolism
- pieces of thrombus, mixed thrombus and blood clot
- INFECTED LESIONS within blood stream
- gas bubbles (air, N2)
- fat, bone marrow (from fractures)
- tumour cells
- others: amniotic fluid (esp during labour)
describe pulmonary emboli
where are they from
what does it cause
- most are SMALL and CLINICALLY SILENT
- most from DVT
- can cause: sudden death, RIGHT heart failre, cardiovascular collapse, PULMONARY HAEMORRHAGE: if in a middle sized vessel
- if MULTIPLE EMBOLI, may cause PULMONARY HYPERTENSION
describe systemic arterial emboli
what do they arise from
what are the origins
what does it cause
- arises from ARTERIAL CIRCULATION
- ~80% from intracardiac mural thrombi (attach to wall of blood vessel)
- ~10-15% of unknown origin
- generally causes TISSUE INFARCTION/GANGRENE
what is infarction
an AREA of ISCHAEMIC NECROSIS caused by OCCLUSION of either the ARTERIAL SUPPLY or VENOUS DRAINAGE in a particular tissue
what is the main (99%) cause of infarcts
THROMBOTIC or EMBOLIC events- ARTERIAL OCCLUSION Other: - vasospasm - haemorrhage into atheromatous plaque - vessel compression (by tumour) - traumatic rupture
what does the shape of an infarct reflect
lung
kidney
spleen
the TERRITORY of occluded blood supply
lung - wedge shaped
kidney - triangular
spleen - scarred
how are infarcts classified
- based on COLOUR (which reflects amount of haemorrhage) and presence or absence of MICROBIAL INFECTION
what does a white infarct mean
where
- anaemic
- in SOLID organs w/ end arterial circulation (heart, spleen, kidney)
what does a red infarct mean
haemorrhagic
what does a septic infarct mean
infected infarct
what does a bland infarct mean
uninfected infarct
which factors influence the outcome of an infarct
- nature of vascular supply (availability of alternative blood supply)
- rate at which occlusion develops (if slow occlusion, more time for alt perfusion pathways)
- vulnerability to hypoxia (neurons and myocardial cells= vulnerable)
- oxygen content of blood
how does the infarct area’s appearance vary with time
6h after infarct: no visible changes
24h: pallor visible, inflammation ata edge
days/weeks: macrophage infiltration + fibrosis
months: fibrous scar
what is shock
a final common pathway for several lethal clinical events best described as INADEQUATE TISSUE PERFUSION
what characterises shock
SYSTEMIC HYPOTENSION due to:
- REDUCED CARDIAC OUTPUT
- REDUCED EFFECTIVE CIRCULATING BLOOD VOLUME
what causes cardiogenic shock
results from low cardiac output due to heart failure
what causes hypovolaemic shock
low cardiac output due to loss of blood or plasma volume
what causes septic shock
results from vasodilation and peripheral pooling of blood as part of a systemic immune reaction to bacterial or fungal infection
what are the symptoms of shock
- altered conscious state
- pale, bluish or moist skin
- restlessness or irritability
- excessive thirst
- rapid and weak pulse
- nausea/vomiting
what is the first aid of shock
- place victim in shock position
- keep person warm and comfy
- turn head to one side (if no injury suspected)