Morphology of Thrombi Flashcards
Define pathology and morphology
- the precise study and diagnosis of disease
- study of shape, form, or structure; 1 facet of pathology
__________ triad in thrombosis components.
- Virchow’s
- endothelial injury**, hypercoagulability, abnormal blood flow (stasis or turbulence)
What make up the lines of Zahn?
- white (pink on H&E): platelets and fibrin
- red (red on H&E): trapped RBCs
Venous vs. Arterial thrombi: where they form, why they form, their “color”
- Location: arterial are most common in coronary, cerebral, and femoral arteries while venous form in lower extremities, upper extremities, pelvic plexi, dural sinuses, portal and hepatic vein
- Cause: arterial are due to endothelial injury and/or turbulence and can be assoc. with ruptured plaque, vasculitis, trauma; venous are due to stasis
- Color: arterial are called white thrombi due to increased role of platelets while venous are called red thrombi due to increased rol of RBC trapping
4 potential fates of thrombi
- propagation: progress of growth
- embolization: dislodge and travel via blood to another site
- dissolution: fibrinolysis of young break thrombi
- organization and recanalization: older thrombi organized and new channels form to reestablish blood flow
Saddle Embolus
-thromboembolus (usually due to DVT) that ends at bifurcation of pulmonary artery
Venous vs. arterial thromboemboli
-Venous thrombi usually cause pulmonary embolism while arterial cause systemic thromboemboli that affect end organs like limbs, brain, GI and other viscera
2 parts of postmortem clot
- RBCs: current jelly
2. Coagulated plasma: chicken fat
2 main features important in identifying a thrombus
- Lines of Zahn
2. Attachment to vessel wall
Describe main differences between postmortem clot and thrombus
- post mortem clots result from separation and settling of blood components with the cessation of circulation/lack of flow
- softer consistency, lack lines of Zahn, non-adherent