circulation I: disorders of circulation and fluids Flashcards

1
Q

edema

A

presence of excessive fluid in a tissue or a body cavity

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2
Q

pitting edema

A

can press and make a pit in the skin

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3
Q

anasarca

A

widespread swelling of skin

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4
Q

dependent edema

A

clinically detectable increase in ECFV in dependent area (limb) causing pitting or swelling

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5
Q

ascites

A

serous fluid in peritoneal cavity

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6
Q

4 mechanisms of edema formation

A

1 - increased intravascular pressure (heart failure or venous obstruction)
2 - decreased serum oncotic pressure (low protein synthesis, protein loss)
3 - increased permeability of blood vessels (burns, inflammation, chemical injury)
4 - lymphatic obstruction or destruction (neoplasia, post-surgery, parasites)

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7
Q

gross morphologic changes with edema

A
  • swelling of organ or tissue

- increased mass of organ or tissue

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8
Q

microscopic morphologic changes with edema

A
  • separation of tissue elements by pale, pink, protein-containing fluid
  • no new cellular elements in the tissue
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9
Q

unilateral limb edema

A
  • lymphatic obstruction
  • most likely parasitic filariasis
  • possibly tumor
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10
Q

pulmonary edema

A
  • increased hydrostatic pressure

- infarction in left ventricle

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11
Q

hyperemia

A

increase volume of blood within a specific vascular bed

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12
Q

active hyperemia

A

increased flow into area

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13
Q

passive hyperemia

A

decreased outflow from area

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14
Q

morphology of hyperemia

A
  • organ or tissue appears red
  • blood remains within blood vessels
  • vessels dilated by not damaged
  • edema not necessary
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15
Q

hyperemia in lung

A

might be secondary to left-sided heart failure

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16
Q

hemorrhage

A

flow of blood from the vascular compartment

17
Q

petechiae

A

Minute hemorrhagic spots, of pinpoint to pinhead size, in the skin, which are not blanched by pressure.

18
Q

purpura

A

do not blanch when pressure is applied

19
Q

hematoma

A

localized mass of extravascular blood confined to a tissue, organ, space, or potential space

20
Q

hemoptysis

A

Spitting of blood derived from the lungs or bronchial tubes as a result of pulmonary or bronchial hemorrhage.

21
Q

hematemesis

A

vomiting of blood

22
Q

melena

A

blood in stool

23
Q

ischemia

A

reduction or loss of blood supply to a tissue or organ, major problem being oxygen but potentially glucose and other blood constituents as well

24
Q

infarction

A

death of cells, a tissue or an organ due to insufficient or absent blood supply

25
gross morphology of infarction
bland: tissue is pale or white hemorrhagic: bleeding into dead tissue
26
microscopic morphology of infarction
- coagulative necrosis - cells become eosinophilic, nuclei shrink, become hyper chromatic, less distinct, and then break up - infiltration of neutrophils to digest dead tissue - macrophages appear to remove debris - scarring in organs other than the brain
27
backward heart failure
failure to pump blood out of the veins, often called "congestive failure"
28
forward heart failure
failure to pump blood into the arteries with enough pressure to perfuse organs, can cause ischemia
29
global heart failure
diffusely diseased myocardium exhibiting both forward and backward elements of heart failure
30
heart failure can cause congestion in:
lungs or liver
31
heart failure may cause edema in:
lungs, liver, or limbs
32
unusual manifestations of heart failure
pleural effusion, ascites, dyspnea at rest
33
results of congestive heart failure
chronic congestion of liver or increased venous pressure leading to dependent edema
34
is a thrombus a clot?
no
35
what does a thrombus have in common with a clot?
both coagulated blood
36
thrombus
coagulation within the cardiovascular system