Thrombus/Embolism Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three branches of Virchow’s Triad?

A

Endothelial injury, hypercoaguability, abnormal blood flow

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2
Q

What could cause hypercoaguability of blood?

A

Post-partum, smoking, sickle cell anaemia, genetic disorders (eg protein C and S deficiency, anti-thrombin III deficiency), MI, AF

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3
Q

What abnormalities in blood flow could lead to a thrombus?

A

Stasis, turbulent flow, decreased dilution of clotting factors

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4
Q

How could endothelial injury lead to thrombus formation?

A

Could form an atheroma, inflammation, loss of endothelium therefore exposed matrix, platelet adhesion, tissue factor release

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5
Q

What are the possible effects of an arterial thrombus?

A

Ischaemia and infarction (severity depends on site and collateral supply)

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6
Q

What are the possible effects of a venous thrombus?

A

Pulmonary embolism, oedema, venous congestion, ischaemia, infarction

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7
Q

How do venous and arterial thrombi differ in appearance?

A

Venous are darker, more red, with higher cell content, softer and gelatinous. Whereas arterial are paler, lines of Zahn, their first layer is always platelets then alternate layers of fibrin.

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8
Q

What is respiratory compromise?

A

Where there is a mismatch in perfusion:ventilation resulting in hypoxaemia

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9
Q

What is haemodynamic compromise as a result of a pulmonary embolism?

A

The pulmonary embolism increases resistance to pulmonary blood flow, this then increases pressure in right heart leading to acute right sided heart failure.

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10
Q

How does warfarin work? What is it used for?

A

Prevention of thrombosis. Works by inhibiting vitamin K (vit K antagonist)

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11
Q

How does heparin work? And what is it used for?

A

Prevent DVT, blood thinner, unstable angina. Binds to and activates anti-thrombin III. Anti-thrombin III lyses thrombin (factor II) and factor X, TF prevents thrombus formation.

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