Hemodynamics Flashcards

1
Q

Hyperemia

A

Locally increased blood flow as a result of active arteriolar dilation; leads to increased blood flow causing erythema

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2
Q

Congestion

A

Locally increased blood flow as a result of passive venous insufficiency; may be systemic (2/2 right sided heart failure) or local (2/2 venous obstruction)

Leads to edema and hypoxia due to accumulation of deoxygenated hemoglobin; tissue appears bluish/dusky

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3
Q

Virchow’s Triad

A

Describes the 3 key elements involved in thrombosis

  1. Endothelial injury - causes endothelial dysfunction, disrupting the normal balance of pro- and anti-coagulatory effects
  2. Stasis or turbulent blood flow - turbulent blood flow injures endothelial cells, causing pro-coagulatory activation; stasis brings platelets into contact with endothelial cells
  3. Hypercoagulability of blood - any alteration of the coagulation pathways that predisposes to thrombosis; may be primary (genetic) or secondary (acquired)
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4
Q

Cardiogenic Shock

A

Systemic hypotension resulting from low cardiac output; low cardiac output can result from pump failure (infarction, arrhythmias, tamponade) or from outflow obstruction (pulmonary embolism)

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5
Q

Hypovolemic Shock

A

Systemic hypotension resulting from loss of blood or plasma volume; often 2/2 hemorrhage, fluid loss from severe burns, etc.

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6
Q

Septic Shock

A

Systemic hypotension resulting from widespread vasodilation and peripheral pooling of blood 2/2 a systemic immune response to infection

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7
Q

Neurogenic Shock

A

Systemic hypotension resulting from loss of vascular tone and pooling of blood in the peripheral circulation; often 2/2 spinal cord injury

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8
Q

Anaphylactic Shock

A

Systemic hypotension resulting from systemic vasodilation and increased vascular permeability following an IgE-mediated hypersensitivity reaction

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9
Q

Stages of Shock

A
  1. Nonprogressive stage - reflex compensatory mechanisms (tachycardia, peripheral vasoconstriction, renal conservation of fluid) are activated and perfusion of vital organs is maintained
  2. Progressive Stage - tissue hypoperfusion, widespread hypoxia, metabolic acidosis
  3. Irreversible - Onset of cellular and tissue injury incompatible with survival
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10
Q

Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation

A

Characterized by the onset (sudden or insidious) of widespread fibrin thrombi in the microcirculation causing diffuse circulatory insufficiency to the vital organs; platelet and coagulation protein consumption occurs at the same time as fibrinolytic activation, causing risk for bleeding emergency

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11
Q

Classes of Edema

A

May be transudate or exudate

Local (2/2 local increase in hydrostatic pressure) or systemic (2/2 right ventricle failure causing pooling of blood in venous circulation)

Causes include decreased plasma colloid pressure (2/2 reduced synthesis of albumin in the liver), salt retention (2/2 decreased renal function), or lymphatic obstruction

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12
Q

Classification of hemorrhages

A

Petechiae - 1-2mm hemorrhages into skin, often 2/2 locally increased intravascular pressure & low platelet counts

Purpura - > 3mm hemorrhages

Ecchymoses - > 1-2cm hemorrhages

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13
Q

Infarct

A

An area of ischemic necrosis caused by occlusion of the arterial supply or venous drainage; usually 2/2 thrombotic arterial occlusions

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14
Q

Thrombosis

A

Pathological clotting within intact vessels, usually caused by Virchow’s triad of primary abnormalities

Arterial or venous

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15
Q

Embolus

A

Any detached, intravascular solid, liquid, or gas that is carried by the blood to a site distant from its point of origin; usually represent some part of a dislodged thrombus

May be venous - i.e. from the deep veins of the legs, leading to pulmonary embolism

May be arterial - leading to reduced perfusion of the brain, retina, spleen, kidney, intestine, and lower leg

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16
Q

Pulmonary embolism

A

Usually originate from DVTs carried thorugh progressively larger venous channels and the right side of the heart before becoming stuck in the pulmonary arterial vasculature

17
Q

Edema

A

Fluid accumulation in interstitial tissue

18
Q

Effusion

A

Fluid accumulation in a body cavity

19
Q

Left Sided Heart Failure - Causes & Effects

A

Causes: Cardiomyopathy, hypertension, valvular disease (aortic/mitral)

Effects: Pulmonary edema and right sided heart failure, reduced renal perfusion, brain hypoxia

20
Q

Right Sided Heart Failure - Causes & Effects

A

Causes: Left sided heart failure, COPD, pulmonary fibrosis, pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension

Effects: Liver congestion, spleen congestion

21
Q

Hematoma

A

A mass composed of blood infiltrating soft tissue

22
Q

Ischemia

A

Interruption of blood flow - can be arterial or venous

Generally caused by emboli or compression (i.e. compartment syndrome)

23
Q

Thrombosis

A

Intravascular mass of coagulated blood composed of platelets, fibrin, entrapped cells, and other plasma proteins; adherent to the luminal surface of the vessel

24
Q

Outcomes of thromboembolism (4)

A
  1. Lysis - the role of fibrinolytic agents in the blood
  2. Propagation - enlargement and extension of the thrombus
  3. Organization - fibrosis of the thrombus
  4. Recanalization - new channels form within the thrombus allowing renewed blood flow through the obstructed vessel
25
Q

Vegetation

A

A mass of platelets, fibrin, and microcolonies of microorganisms that accumulates on the valves of the heart; characteristic of endocarditis

26
Q

Critical complications of shock

A
  1. Brain - hypoxic encephalopathy
  2. Lungs - adult respiratory distress syndrome
  3. Kidneys - acute tubular necrosis
  4. GI - hemorrhagic necrosis of the mucosa
27
Q

Massive vs. Small Pulmonary Emboli

A

Massive PE (i.e. saddle embolus) - acute obstruction of pulmonary arteries (R & L) causing acute hypoxia with or without chest pain, followed by sudden death

Small emboli - may be asymptomatic if small and few in number, or may lead to progressive hypoxia with or without chest pain