Hemodynamic Disorder Flashcards

1
Q

In order to maintain fluid homeostasis what 3 things must be in check?

A
  1. Vascular wall integrity: trauma causes focal defect in vessel wall
  2. Intravascular hydrostatic pressure: congestive heart failure causes alveolar capillary congestion and eventuall pulmonary edema
  3. osmolarity: liver failure (cirrhosis) cause low intravascular protein leading to edema
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2
Q

Blood is maintained as a _______ state until injury requires_______

List 2 failures of this

A

Blood is maintained as a liquid state until injury requires clot formation

*hypercoagulability state due to mutation in Factor V gene results in blood clotting when it shoudln’t

*hypocoagulability state due to platelet defect results in blood not clotting when it should

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3
Q

What is edema and where does it occur?

A

accumulation of interstitial fluid in tissues

occurs in subcutaneous tissues and body cavities (pleural cavity, peritoneal cavity, pericardial cavity)

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4
Q

What is Anasarca?

A

very severe generalized edema

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5
Q

Describe th normal fluid balance/distribution in the body

A

2/3 intracellular

1/3 extracellular (mostly interstitial) with 5% of extracellular fluid in blood plasma

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6
Q

what are 3 factors tha affect fluid balance

A
  • vascular hydrostatic pressure
  • plasma colloid osmotic pressure ( due to plasma proteins-abumin, globulin)
  • normally balanced so no net loss or gain of fluid
  • **lymph vessels pick up any residual fluid)**
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7
Q

When does edemea result?

A

when increased hydrostatic pressure or decreased osmotic pressure leads to net accumulation of fluid (in interstitium)

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8
Q

WHat 2 things cause increased hydrostatic pressure and what are some examples?

A
  1. Venous Obstruction/ Impaired Venous return
    • DVT, Mass lesion, lower extremity inactivity, cirrhosis (ascites)
    • CHF-increased hydrostatic pressure in alveolar capillaries due to left ventricular heart failure pulmonary edema and eventually peripheral edema
    • hypoperfusion of kidneys causes secondary hyperalodsteronism
  2. Arteriolar dilartion
    • heat, neurohumoral dysfunction
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9
Q

Why does CHF cause edema?

A

It leads to increased capillary pressure

increased hydrostatic pressure in alveolar capillaries due to left ventricular failure pulmonary edema and eventually peripheral edema

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10
Q

How does reduced plasma osmotic pressure occur and how does it lead to edema?

A
  • occurs due to excessive loss of albumin
    • nephrotic syndrome (protein losing)
    • protein losing enteropathy (IBS)
    • malnutrition
    • Liver disease (reduced synthesis, cirrhosis)
  • Excessive loss of albumin leads to edema bc it:
  • leads to decreased intravascular volume, and secondary hyperaldosteronism
  • albumin is serum protein most reposible for maintaining colloid osmotic pressure
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11
Q

Lymphatic obstruction can lead to edema. How does lympathic obstruction occur?

A
  • usually localized
  • inflmmatory (ex: parasitic infection causing lymphatic fibrosis)
  • neoplastic (ex: infiltration and obstruction of lymphatic by neoplastic cells)
  • post-surgical/ post-radiation (ex: after mastectomy w/ lymph node dissection, scarring and removal of lymph channels leads to edema)
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12
Q

Sodium (and water) retention can lead to edema. How does this occur?

A

sodium and water retention increasd hydrostatic pressure (expanded intravascular volume) and decreased colloid osmotic pressure

causes: excessive salt intake w/ renal insufficiency

acute reduction of renal function (ex: glomerulonephritis)

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13
Q

Describe the morphology of edema:

When do we normally see:

  • subcutaneous edema
  • pulmonary edema
  • edema of the brain
A

edema is more easily recognized grossly. microscopically subtle cell swelling and separation of extracellular matrix elements

subcutaneous edema: CHF and Renal failure

Pulmonary edema: left ventricle failure

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14
Q

What is this image showing?

A

Pulmonary edema

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15
Q

WHat is hyperemia and what makes it occur?

A

hyperemia is increase in blood colume within a tissue

  • due to increased bloow flow and arteriolar dilation. It is an Active process
  • occuras at sites of inflammation (ex: conjuctivitis) or in exercising skeletal muscles
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16
Q

WHat is congetsion and why does it happen?

A

congestion: increase in blood volume within a tissue (passive)

due to decreased/impaired outflow of venous blood (Passive)

may occur systemically (liver and lung congestion due to heart failure) or locally (obstruction of superior sagittal sinus of dura)

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17
Q

WHat is the mechanism of the change in the liver and lungs during heart failure?

A
  • passive increase in blood flow (decreased venous return)
  • extravasation of blood out ot eh sinusoids (liver) and alveoli wall capillaries (lungs)
  • hydrostatic pressure has resulted in increased fluid in the interstitium
  • lack of oxygen has resulted in necrosis of central regions of the liver ( secondarily to the long-standing congetsion resulting in stadid and lack of oxygen)
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18
Q

What is involved in primary hemostasis and what dominates it

what is involved in secondary hemostasis and what dominates it

A

Primary (dominated by the platelet)

  • vasculature
  • blood flow
  • platelet count and function
  • extracellular matrix proteins

Secondary (clotting factors build upon the platelet plug)

  • platelet plug
  • coagulation factors
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19
Q

What are the 5 steps of primary hemostasis?

A
  1. platelet adhesion
  2. shape change
  3. granule release (ADP, TXA2)
  4. Recruitment (other platelets and factors)
  5. Aggregation (hemostatic pug)
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20
Q

WHat are the steps involved in secondary hemostasis?

A
  1. tissue factor
  2. phospholipid complex expression
  3. thrombin activation
  4. fibrin polymerization

**fibrin strengthens the plug. generating thrombin is the goal which will turn fibrin into fibrinogen which forms the mesh network

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21
Q

What are the laboratory screenings for primary hemostasis?

A
  • platelet count
  • platelet function
    • PFA-100
    • platelet aggregation studies
  • vWillebrand studies
    • vW antigen
    • vW activity
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22
Q

What are the laboartaory screenings for secondary hemostasis?

A

Prothrombin time (PT) (extrinsic and common pathway)

activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) (intrinsic and common pathway)

fibrinogen activity

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23
Q

Bleeding disorders are defects in:

A
  • vascular integrity
  • platelet count and/or function
  • Von Wilebrand factor deficiency or dysfunction
  • Clotting factor deficiency/inhibition
    • Hemophilia (Factor VIII)
    • Liver Disease (CF’s are made in the liver so liver dysfunction you dont make all of the necessary CFs)
    • anticoagulants
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24
Q

What is a hemorrhage and what are some common causes of hemorrhages?

A
  • extravasion of blood from vessels
  • accumulation of blood within a space
    • hemopericarium, hemothorax, hemoperitoneum, hemoarthosis
  • causes:
    • ruptured vessel; trauma, weakening of vessel wall (ahterosclerosis, inflammation vasculitis, aneurysm)
    • peptic ulcer
    • chronic congestion: liver, lungs
    • predisposition to hemorrhage with minimal trauma (homorrhagic diathesis) seen with decreased ability to clot
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25
Q

What is a hematoma

A

an accumulation of blood within a tissue

ex: epidural, subdural, intracerebral, subcutaneous (bruise)

26
Q

What are Petechial hemorrhages?

A

hemorrhages into skin, mucous membranes or serosal surfaces. Associted with low platelt counts (thrombocytopenia) platelet dysfunction, loss of vascuular wall support, or local pressure

27
Q

What is purpura?

A

>3mm hemorrhages associated with same disorders as petechiae w/trauma, vasculitis, and vascular fragility

28
Q

What is Ecchymoses?

A

>1-2 cm subcutaneous hematomas (bruises). associated with trauma, exacerbate by above conditions

29
Q

What fctors are involved in inhibiting thrombosis?

A

Antithombin III and Protein C/S

30
Q

Role of antibthrombin III

A

inhibits thrombin. ATIII inactivates thrombin. (thrombin catalyzes fibrin to finbrinogen) so AT3 prevents fibrinogen from being formed by inhibiting thrombin

31
Q

Role of protein C and S

A

molecules that get activated by thrombin and thrombomodulin. They are natural anticoagulants. The inhibit factos that form firbin meshwork, particularly facotrs V and VIII

32
Q

Laboratory screening for anticoagulants

A

Protein C and S activity and antigen (amt)

AT3 activity and antigen

molecular abnormalities in factor V or prothrombin gene

Lupus anticoagulant and antiphospholipid antibodies

33
Q

WHat factors/things promote thrombosis?

A
  • Endothelial injury
    • trauma, surgeyr, fractre, burn, uclerated atherosclerotic plaques, vasculites, smoking, sepsis
  • Abnormal blood flow
    • atheroscleosis, prolonged bed rest, atrial fibrilation, prostestic heart valves, aneurysm
34
Q

Inherited hypercoagulability factors

A

Protein C deficiency

Protein S deficiency

Antithrombin III deficiency

35
Q

acquired hypercoagulability factors

A

malignancy

estrogens

antiphospholipid antibody

36
Q

WHat is Factor 5 Leiden

A
  • most common inherited predisporition to thrombis
  • single point mutation in F5 G to A
    • this is the cleavage site for protein C. so mutation prevents cleavage
  • heterozygotes vs homozygotes
  • activated protein C resistance, menaing not broken down by protein C, menaing more V floats around longer and participates in more clotting
37
Q

WHat ais Virchow;s Triad in Thromboss (What are the 3 primary abnormalities that lead to thrombus formation?)

A

Endothelial Injury

Hypercoagulability

Abnormal blood flow

38
Q

What is thrombosis? and what are geeral characteristics of a thrombus?

A

Thrombosis formation of a blood clot within intact vessels

  • general characteristics:
    • begin at a site of endothelial injury, or a site of turbulence of flow, or site of blood stasis
    • point of attahcment to wall
    • lines of Zahn: laminations apparent grossly +/- or microscopically produced by alternating layers of platelets, fibrins, and RBCs
    • May fragment and create emboli
39
Q

WHat is an ulcerated atherosclerotic plaque and what is it an example of?

A

Thrombis!

  • rupture in endothelial surface of plaque caused thrombis
  • turbulent blood flow dur to atherosclerosis likely contributed to rupture in plaque surface
  • clinical significance: myocardial infarction
40
Q

What is an abdominal aortic aneurysm and what is it often secondary to?

A

abdominal aortic anerysm secondary to atherosclerosis

  • abnormal blood flow:
    • atheroscleosis causes weakening of the wall of the aorta resulting in aneurysm
    • anerysm leads to turbulent blood flow and stasis
    • stasis slows washout of clotting factors and impedes inflow of clottin gfactor inhibitors
  • Endothelial injury and activation
    • also occurs with atherosclerosis, stasis, and turbulent flow
  • Clinical significance: possible rupture of aorta, possible embolism of thrombis to legs
41
Q

What causes venous thrombosis and where does it usually occur?

A

Most commonly occurs in lower extremities (90%)

  • causes:
    • immobilization: post-operative, long car or plane ride, congestive heart failure
    • trauma, surgery, burns, pregancy
    • malignancy: migratory thrombophlebitis
  • no associated inflammation, 50% are asymptomatic
  • thrombi in the deep veins of the legs (DVT) may break off and travel to the lungs (emboli). THombi in superficial veins (saphenous vein system) of legs rarely embolize (local swellin gpain and may result in skin ulceration)
42
Q

WHat are 4 possible fates of a DVT

A

propagation towards heart

organized and recanalized

embolization to lungs

resolution

43
Q

What is an Embolus? What are the types and what is the consequence?

A

Embolus: detached intravascular mass carried by blood to site distant from origin

types:

  • thrombus (thromboembolism) most common
  • fat: rupture of vascular sinusoids/ venules (fracture of long bones, but not usually symptomatic, soft tissue trauma burns)
  • air: obstetric procedures, chest wall injuries, divers (decompression sickness)
  • amniotic fluid: during delivery
  • tumor

****consequence: may cause ischemic necrosis (infarct in rgan to which it travels****

44
Q

WHat are the possible sources of thromboemboli?

A
  • Vessels: usually in DVs of les (DVT) and travels to lungs
  • Heart: artiral or ventricular walls of valve leaflets
    • Right Heart: embolus travel to lungs
    • Left Heart: emobolus travel in systemic arterial circulation to lower legs, brain, intestines, kidneys, spleen, upper extremities
      • May result in infarction of area supplied by vessel
    • Thrombotic mass on heart valve=vegetation
  • Atheroscleortic plaque (abdominal aorta, carotid artery) travel to legs or brain
  • Paradoxical embolism: travels throgh heart defect into systemic circulation (patent foramen ovale) this is very uncommon
45
Q

What is a Pulmonary Embolism? P.E.

A

The most common type of embolism

usual source is DVT (above level of knee)

Most are asymptomatic

But serious consequences when it is a “saddle” emboli ( at bifurcation of pulomnary arteries) or multiple emboli which could lead to sudden death, or pulmonary hemorrhage +/- infarction

46
Q

WHat is the typical path of a pulmonary embolism?

A

DVT-right atrium-right ventricle-pulmonary arteries

47
Q

What is an infarction

A
  • an area of ischemic necrosis caused by occlusion of either the arterial supply or the venous drainage of affected tissue
  • etiologies of arterial occlusion
    • thrombosis due to durptured atheroscleorotic plaque
    • embolism
    • compression, torsion, vasospasm, trauma
  • venous infarct: much less common
    • flow away from the occluded site still occurs and bypass vessels open up to restore arterial flow. usually in oragns with single efferent veins like testis or ovary
  • causes: venous compression or dehydration
48
Q

What is the difference between a Red infarct or a White infarct?

A
  • Red Infarct: hemorrhagic, classic example is lung infarct secondary to embolus
    • “Loose” tissues allow blood to collect
    • dual circulation tissues (Lung: bronchial arteries and pulmonary arteries)
    • when flow is re-establised (repurfusion due to break up of embolus
    • veous occlusions)
  • White Infarct: anemic (no blood0
    • occurs in solid organs wih end arterial circulation (spleen or kidney)
49
Q

What are the types of necrosis in infarction?

A
  • Ischemic coagulative necrosis,eventual scar formation
    • exceot in brain=liquefactive necrosis, eventual cavity
  • Septic Infarcts: necrosis with abscess formation (liquefactive necrosis with actue inflammation and suppuration)
50
Q

What 3 factors affect infarct development

A
  1. Anatomy of vascular supply
    1. presence or absence of alternative blood supply aka dual blood supply. end arterial circulations ( kidney and spleen)
    2. Rate of occlusion: slowly developing occlusions allow development and/or enlargemnet f collateral blood supply
    3. Tissue vulnerability to hypoxia
      1. neurons: 3-4 minutes
      2. cardiac myofibers: 20-30 minutes
51
Q

What is a DIC?

A

DIsseminated intravascular coagulation

  • characterized by initial clotting resulting in organ ischemia followed by bleeding tendencies
  • consumptive coagulopathy:
    • widespread clotting leads to consumption of factors and platelets
      • clotting factors consumed=bleeding
      • platelets consumed=bleeding
  • associated with severe illness
    • sepsis, trauma, OB complications, fat embolus, cancer, burns, ischemia
52
Q

What is shock?

A

Cardiovascular collapse

  • Systemic hypoperfusion caused by: myocardial pump failure (MI, PE, arryhtmia)
  • Decrease in effective circulating blood volume
    • hemorrhage, fluid loss, septic shock, neurogenic shock, anaphylatic shock
  • Hypotension-impaired prefusion and cellular hypoxia-tissue injury-death
53
Q

WHat are the 3 main types of schock, their mechanisms and clnical examples

A
  1. Cardiogeneic: MI, ventricular rupture, arrythmia, cardiac tamponade, PE
    1. failure of myocardial pump secondary to
      1. intrinsic myocardial damage
      2. extrinsic pressure
      3. obstruction to outflow
  2. Hypovolemic: Hemorrhage, fluid loss (burns, vomiting, diarrhea)
    1. inadequate blood or plasma volume
  3. Septic: overwhelming microbial infection (bacterial or fungal)
    1. peripheral vasodilation and pooling of blood, endothelial activation or injury, leukocyte-induced damage, cytokine activation and diseminted intravascular coagulation (DIC)
54
Q

Neurogenic shock

A
  • interruption of sympathetic vasomotor input with spinal cord injury
    • arteriolar and venous dilation
    • decreased cardiac output
55
Q

What is anaphylactic shock

A
  • IgE mediated hypersensitivity response
    • systemic vasodilation’increased vascular permeability
56
Q

What are the stages of shock?

A
  1. Nonprogressive phase (initial)
    1. tachycardia, peripheral vasoconstriction, renal fluid concservation (primarily from sympathetic stimulation) perfusion of organs maintained
  2. Progressive phase
    1. tissue hypoxia
    2. lowering of tissue pH and blunting of vasomotor response
    3. tissue hypoperfusion present
  3. Irreversible phase
    1. cellular and organ injury present preventing surival
    2. excessive production of lactic acid (anaerobic glycolysis)
57
Q

Morphology of shock: Multi-organ failure, primarily due to hypoxia

A
  • brain: hypoxic.ischemic encephalopathy
  • heart: subendocardial infarcts
  • kidneys: acute tubular necrosis
  • GI tract: mucosal hemorrhages and bowel infarction
  • liver: central hemorrhagic necrosis
  • adrenal glands: cortcal lipid cell depletion
58
Q

What are the clinical manifestations of:

Hypovolemic and Cardiogenic shock

Septic Shock

A

Hypovolemic and Cardiogenic shock:

  • hypotension, tachycardia, tachypnea
  • cool, clammy, and cyanotic skin

Septic Shock

  • hypotension, tachycardia, tachypnea
  • peripheral vasodilation initially
    • skin initially warm and flushed
59
Q

Septic shock

-what are the usual causes

A

mortalitiy up to 20%

main cause of deaths in ICUs

causes usually: gram POSITIVE BACTERIA followed by gram NEGATIVE bacteria an fungi

60
Q

what is the general prognosis for shock? general population, young healthy patients with hypovolemic shock

cardiogenic shock (w/ extensive MI) or Gram negative sepsis

A

gerneal: 20% mortality
hypovolemic: >90%

Cardiogenic (w/extensive MI) or gram-negative sepsis: significantly worse!

61
Q
A