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