What are the causes of localized edema?
What are the causes of systemic edema?
(increased retention of total Na+ and H20)
What is hyperemia?
-increased blood flow due to vasodilation. Active process.
What are the characteristics of acute pulmonary edema?
What are the characteristics of chronic pulmonary edema?
What are the characteristics of acute liver congestion?
What are the characteristics of chronic liver congestion?
What are the three components of hemostasis?
1) endothelial cells (vessel wall injured)
2) platelets
3) coagulation cascade
What is the sequence of events that results in hemostasis?
1)exposure to subendothelium→Platelet binding and activation
2)platelet adherence/aggregation→ primary platelet plug
3) Activation of coagulation cascade at the same time as 1) and 2)
4) Last 2 steps of coagulation cascade →definitive platelet plug
•prothrombin→thrombin
•fibrinogen→fibrin
What can cause small vessel hemorrhage?
What can cause large vessel hemorrhage?
What are the differences between a blood clot and a thrombus?
A thrombus is:
•Result of coagulation cascade and platelet activation (blood clot is cascade only)
•Develops in vascular system or heart in living person (blood clot in extravascular)
•Often attached to underlying endothelium (blood clot not attached)
•Displays orderly layering of platelets and fibrin (blood clot randomly oriented)
What is Virchow triad?
1) endothelial injury
2) disruption of laminar blood flow: stasis or turbulence
3) blood hypercoagulability
What is the main cause of arterial thrombosis?
atherosclerotic vessel disease
What is the sequence of events that lead to artherogenesis?
1) endothelial injury to large/med arteries
2) retention of LDL and endothelial activation
3) LDL oxidation
4) formation of foam cells and propagation of chronic inflammation
5) endothelial dysfunction
6) healing by smooth muscle cells
What are the causes of cardiac thrombi?
What are the causes of aortic thrombi?
-atherosclerosis and aneurysm, which is secondary to atherosclerosis
What are the causes of venous thrombosis?
-pockets of stagnant blood in valves
Whats the major distinction between superficial and deep vein thrombosis?
DVT are prone to embolization
What are the potential outcomes of thrombi?
1) dissolution
2) propagation
3) organization/recanalization
4) embolization
How does disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) lead to death?
o Systemic activation of coagulation→ intravascular fibrin deposition →thrombosis in small/mid vessels→organ failure→ death , At the same time…
o Systemic activation of coagulation→depletion of platelets + coagulation factors→bleeding→death
What activates DIC through thromboplastic substances?
What activates DIC through endothelial injury?
What are the clinical symptoms of DIC?