Fluid and Hemodynamics II (trans 6) Flashcards
Thrombosis
- Thrombosis is a formation of a solid clotted mass (thrombus/antemortem clot) derived from blood elements (vessel, platelets, CF) intravascularly in a living person.
- *Also known as antemortem clot, it is a solid clotted mass that is attached to the vessel wall.
It is to be differentiated from post-mortem clot:
o Formed extravascularly
o Involves clotting factors only
o Clotting after death
o “Currant jelly” or “chicken fat” clot
**Post-mortem Clots. They are rubbery and gelatinous that form perfect cast on vessel walls, and have no attachment to the vessel wall/endothelium.
Thrombus Consistency: Dry and friable Surface: Granular and rough Color: White or buff Attachment: Attached to vessel wall Endothelium: Damaged/ injured Composition: Platelets primarily Rapidity of blood flow: Formed in flowing stream of blood Organization: May be partially organized
Postmortem Clot Consistency: Moist and jelly-like Surface: Smooth and glistening Color: Intense red or yellow Attachment: Not attached to vessel wall Endothelium: Undamaged Composition: Fibrin primarily Rapidity of blood flow: Formed in stagnant column of blood Organization: No organization
Normal Hemostasis
Functions (2)
o Maintenance of blood in a fluid, clot-free state
o Ability to rapidly form a localized hemostatic plug at the site of vascular injury
Normal Hemostasis
Factors/Elements (3)
o Blood vessel wall/endothelium
o Platelets
o Coagulation system
Normal Hemostasis
Sequence of events (4)
o Vasoconstriction
- Stimulated by vascular injury
- Mediated by sympathetic NS and endothelin secretion
o Primary hemostatic plug
- Easily dislodged, platelet response
- Unstable, friable so there is a need to add fibrin
o Secondary hemostatic plug
- Cross-linkage of fibrin
- More stable, firmer
- Produces thrombus, which can occlude blood flow if formed excessively
o Thrombosis and anti-thrombotic events
- Significant in the prevention of excessive thrombus formation
Primary Hemostasis.
Platelets adhere to von Willebrand factor (vWF), located on exposed extracellular matrix (ECM), via glycoprotein 1b (GpIb) receptors leading to their activation. Thus, activated platelets undergo a conformational change and granular release. Released adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and thromboxane A2 (TxA2) induce additional platelet aggregation through binding of platelet GpIIb-IIIa receptors to fibrinogen. This platelet aggregate then fills the vascular defect, forming the primary hemostatic plug.
Secondary Hemostasis.
Local activation of the coagulation cascade (involving tissue factor and platelet phospholipids) results in fibrin polymerization, “cementing” the platelets into a definitive secondary hemostatic plug that is larger and more stable than the primary plug and contains entrapped red cells and leukocytes
Roles of the Three Elements of Hemostasis
Blood vessel wall
- Elaboration of pro-thrombotic factors/substances:
- vWF-platelet binding co-factor (Factor VIII)
- Extrinsic tissue factor activates extrinsic pathway
- Plasminogen activator inhibitors - inhibits fibrinolysis - Insulation of platelets from subendothelial collagen
- Elaboration of humoral factors (endothelin) => vasoconstriction
- Elaboration of anti-thrombotic substances
- Platelet aggregator inhibitors (prostacyclin, ADPase, nitric oxide “NO”)
- Anti-thrombin inhibitors (thrombomodulin, heparinlike molecule)
- Fibrinolytic (tissue plasminogen activator “t-PA”)
Roles of the Three Elements of Hemostasis
Platelet
o Maintain the integrity of the vascular endothelium
o Participate in endothelial repair through the contribution of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)
o Form platelet plugs
o Promote the coagulation cascade through platelet
phospholipid complex
Roles of the Three Elements of Hemostasis
Platelet: Adhesion - Activation-Aggregation
Platelet adhesion
- Attachment to site of injury and exposed collagen
- Needs vWF to bridge platelet and collagen
Platelet secretion and release
- Platelet activation leads to the appearance of negatively charged phospholipids (phosphatidylserine) on their surface which binds calcium and serves as critical nucleation sites for the assembly of complexes containing various coagulation factors.
- Platelet secretory products:
Alpha granules (fibrinogen, fibronectin, PDGF, platelet factor-4)
Dense bodies (ADP, Ca, histamine, serotonin)
Platelet aggregation (platelet-to-platelet interaction)
- Formation of temporary (primary) hemostatic plug
- Stimulated by ADP, TXA2, thrombin
Platelet contraction
- Viscous metamorphosis
- Formation of secondary hemostatic plug
- Mediated by octomyosin
Roles of the Three Elements of Hemostasis
Coagulation System
- Coagulation Cascade. The coagulation cascade is a successive series of amplifying enzymatic reactions. At each step in the process, a proenzyme is proteolyzed to become an active enzyme, which in turn proteolyzes the next proenzyme in the series, eventually leading to the activation of thrombin and the formation of fibrin.
o Conversion of thrombin to fibrinogen and formation of fibrin => thrombus
o May be stimulated by extrinsic and intrinsic pathway
**Fibrinogen – large protein that forms bridging interactions between platelets that promote aggregation
**Thrombin converts fibrinogen to fibrin, functionally cementing the platelets in place
Anti-Clotting Mechanism
Depletion of clotting factors Clearance of clotting factors by liver Fibrinolysis: plasmin and plasminogen Proteases Anti-thrombin
Predisposing Factors to thrombosis
Injury to endothelium
Alteration in normal blood flow
Alteration in the blood (hypercoagulable state)
**Virchow’s Triangle - The predisposing factors as illustrated by Rudolf Virchow. These factors can work either independently or in combination. Ex. Endothelial injury can alter local blood flow and coagulation.
Predisposing Factors to thrombosis: Endothelial Injuries
- Acute Myocardial Infarction
- Injury due to ischemia to heart muscles - Atherosclerosis
- Formed fibrinolytic plaques - Cigarette smoking
- Contain endotheliotoxic chemicals that trigger clot formation - Vasculitis
- Hypertension
- Hypercholesterolemia
Predisposing Factors to thrombosis: Alterations in Blood Flow
- Stasis
A major factor in development of venous thrombi
Can be prevented post-surgery by asking patients to immediately ambulate - Aneurysm
Arterial and cardiac thrombi
Abnormal dilation of blood vessels => irregular blood flow - Valvular stenosis/regurgitation
Rheumatic mitral valve stenosis causes left atrial dilatation - Vascular obstructions
- Turbulence
Causes endothelial injury or dysfunction
Forms counter-currents and local pockets of stasis
Predisposing Factors to thrombosis: Hypercoagulability (Thrombophilia)
- Immobilization
Stagnation or Post-Surgery - Malignancy
E.g. point mutations in Factor V and prothrombin gene - APAS (Anti-Platelet Antibody Syndrome)
- DIC (Disseminated Intravascular Coagulopathy)
- Nephrotic syndrome
o Oral contraceptive use
Morphology of thrombosis
Lines of Zahn
o Gross and microscopic linear laminations
o Distinguishes antemortem from post-mortem thrombosis
o Alternating dark and light regions
- Dark/Red: RBCs, some leukocytes, fibrin (venous system)
- Light/Pale: Clotting factors, degranulated platelets, fibrin (Arterial System)
Types of Thrombus
- Mural Thrombus
- Vegetation Thrombus
- Arterial Thrombi (Occlusive/White/Conglutination)
- Venous Thrombi (Phlebothrombosis/Red/Coagulative)
Types of Thrombus:
Mural Thrombus
o Attached to walls of large capacitance vessels
o Found in aorta, surface of heart, ventricle, and atria
Types of Thrombus:
Vegetation Thrombus
o Found on heart valves
o Infective endocarditis – blood-born bacteria or fungi can adhere to previously damaged valves or can directly damage valves
o Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis – sterile vegetations on non-infected valves in persons with hypercoagulable states
Types of Thrombus: Arterial Thrombi (Occlusive/White/Conglutination)
o Occur at site of injury/turbulence o Has retrograde growth o Prone to occlusion o Gray/White thrombi o More platelets and fibrin, less RBC
Types of Thrombus: Venous Thrombi (Phlebothrombosis/Red/Coagulative)
o Occurs at the site of stasis o Has forward propagation o Prone to occlusion and fragmentation o Red, stasis thrombi o More RBCs
REMEMBER
One of the following can occur to the thrombi if a patient survives initial thrombosis
Propagation – Platelets grow in dimension & number
Lysis and Resolution – The major outcome; due to fibrinolysis
Embolization– The thrombi dislodge and can travel to other sites of vasculature
Organization– The thrombus becomes part of the wall; fibroblastic reparative process
1. Mechanical
2. Recanalized – formation of secondary or tertiary vessels (to compensate); mainly occur in deep veins of the lower extremities.
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulopathy (DIC)
An acute, subacute, or chronic thrombo-embolic disorder
Occurs as 2° cluster of variety of clinical disorders
Presenting with: thrombotic ischemia, consumption coagulopathy, shock
Also known as:
o Defibrination syndrome
o Microcirculatory thrombosis
o Consumption coagulopathy
Clinical associations o Sepsis o Snake bites o Abruption placenta o Retained dead fetus o Carcinomatosis o Burns o Shock o Amniotic fluid embolism (AFE) Morphology o Multiple microthrombi in different organs (brain, heart, lungs, kidneys, adrenals) o 2° ischemic necrosis or hypoxic injury to tissues o Paradoxical multiple hemorrhages. Due to consumption of clotting factors
EMBOLISM
- Process by which a detached intravascular solid, liquid or gaseous mass (embolus) is carried via blood stream to a site distant to its point of origin.
Types o Thrombo-embolism o Systemic embolism o Amniotic fluid embolism o Air embolism o Fat/cholesterol embolism
Types of Embolism:
Pulmonary Thrombo-Embolism (PTE)
95% arise from deep veins of leg
Passes from the deep veins of the leg to the inferior vena cava entering the right atrium then the right ventricle, which shunts blood to the pulmonary arteries where the thromboembolus lodges.
Majority lodges at large and medium sized pulmonary arteries
Associated diseases/states: immobilization, cardiac disease, recent surgery, carcinoma
o These conditions all contain the predisposing Virchow’s triad
o To prevent thrombo-embolism, ambulate to prevent hemostasis
Types of Embolism:
Pulmonary Thrombo-Embolism (PTE) - Morphology
- Saddle embolus (thrombo-emboli in the pulmonary artery)
- Occlude the main pulmonary artery, straddle the pulmonary artery bifurcation - Paradoxical embolus
- A venous type of thrombus that gained entry into the systemic circulation
- It is “paradoxical” how it entered systemic circulation
- Pathway is through a hole in the heart usually in an interatrial or interventricular defect and bypass the pulmonary circulation
* *May have hemorrhagic infarction of lung – minority will have this complication