What is a clot?
General term for mass of coagulated blood (can occur outside the body or after death)
What is a Thrombus?
Blood clot formed in situ in a blood vessel or heart chamber during life
What is an Embolus?
Detached intravascular material that is carried from origin to distant site (not just thrombotic material)
What are the 5 types of embolus?
Thrombus (DVT)
Fat embolus
Air embolus
Amniotic fluid embolus
Foreign material
What is Virchow’s triad?
A model that describes and categorises the risks of thrombosis (has 3 main components that contribute to the risk)
What are the 3 main components of Virchow’s triad?
Stasis
Vessel wall injury
Hypercoagulability
What is stasis?
Anything that stops your blood from flowing
What are risk factors for Vessel wall injury?
Endothelial dysfunction
- Smoking
- Hypertension
Endothelial damage
- Surgery
- Catheter (PICC lines)
- Trauma
What are hereditary risk factors for hypercoagulability?
What are acquired risk factors for hypercoagulability?
What are clinical risk factors for stasis?
Immobility
Polycythemia
What is factor V Leiden?
-FVL= inherited thrombophilia
-Autosomal dominant (incomplete penetrance)
-3-5% white european pop. are heterozygous
- Often need acquired risk to produce symptoms
What is heterozygous risk for FVL?
5-10x risk
What is homozygous risk for FVL?
16-18x
What is the mutant form of Factor V?
Lack Arg506 cleavage site
What does a mutant form of Factor V cause?
Resistant to degradation by activated protein C, this results in hypercoagulable state
Can lead to unprovoked VTE & recurrent pregnancy loss
What is anti- phospholipid syndrome?
What autoantibodies are involved in Anti-phospholipid syndrome?
B2glycoprotein 1
Anti- cardiolipin
Lupus anticoagulant
What type of thrombosis risk is increased in anti- phospholipid syndrome?
Increased risk of arterial or venous thrombosis
How is anti- phospholipid antibody syndrome diagnosed?
What causes an arterial thromboses?
What is an arterial thrombus?
Where to Arterial thromboses usually occur?
Coronaries
Carotids
Cerebral vessels
Lower limb arteries
What causes Venous thromboses?