Hemorrhage and Hemostasis
Hemorrhage and Hemostasis
Hemorrhage and Hemostasis
Hemorrhage
Extravasation of blood due to ruptured
vessels
From hemo = blood, rrhagia = to burst forth
Surface
Hemorrhage under the skin or mucous
membranes looks red (oxygenated Hb) or
purple (deoxygenated Hb)
Colors of bruising
Initial hemorrhage of RBCs into tissue is
cleared by macrophages, which process Hb
Distribution of hemorrhage(s)
Multifocal indicates problem affecting vessels or platelets
thrombocytopenia or thrombocytopathy
reduced number or function of platelets preventing coagulation
vasculitis
immune mediated--precipitation of Ag-Ab complexes, which are chemotactic
for neutrophils, resulting in vascular damage
infections of endothelium
Focal distribution
single or a few focal hemorrhages are typical of trauma
regional neoplasm, thrombosis, or microbial invasion
problems with protein clotting factors
Petechiae
Petechiae
Petechiae or purpurae
Echymoses or contusions
Hematoma--subdural
Hematoma
Subcapsular hematoma
Hemopericardium
This is hemopericardium as demonstrated
by the dark blood in the pericardial sac
opened at autopsy. Penetrating trauma or
massive blunt force trauma to the chest
(often from the steering wheel) causes a
rupture of the myocardium and/or coronary
arteries with bleeding into the pericardial
cavity. The extensive collection of blood in
this closed space leads to cardiac
tamponade. A pericardiocentesis, with
needle inserted into the pericardial cavity,
can be a diagnostic procedure.
Gastrointestinal hemorrhage
When rate is slow, blood is digested or lost
in feces
In upper GI, blood turns black and tarry as it is
digested and is called melena
Melena is symptomatic of peptic ulcers, ruptured
esophageal varices, cancers
Pericardial hemorrhagehemopericardium
Build-up of external pressure inhibits filling
Cardiac tamponade = compression
Intracranial hemorrhage
Always bad because of the rigid cranium
CSF pressure increases rapidly if bleeding rate is
greater than rate of fluid resorption
Hemodynamics
Maintenance of blood volume
Maintenance of blood pressure
Mainenance of clot-free flow
plasmin
Mechanism of hemostasis
Reflex sympathetic noradrenergic
vasoconstrictor system activated locally
Damaged vascular endothelium releases
endothelin
10 times more potent than angiotensin II
Platelet structure
Anuclear cell fragments synthesized in marrow
Surface glycoprotein Ib and IIa/IIIb receptors
Internal alpha granules containing
Factors V and VIII and IV
Fibrinogen, fibronectin, thromboxaneA2
PDGF, TGF-b
Platelet structure
Platelet actions
Adhesion to extracellular matrix
GpIb links to collagen via vWF
GpIIb/IIIa links platelets via fibrinogen
Contraction
Secondary hemostatic plug
Platelet aggregation
Clotting v. thrombosis
THROMBUS: Blood that has solidified
within the vascular lumens or cardiac
chambers
CLOT: Blood that has solidified anywhere
else
THROMBOEMBOLISM: Portion of
thrombus that travels through the
vasculature to form a plug elsewhere
EMBOLISM: vascular plug, not always
from a thrombus
Blood loss
Dehydration
Reduced cardiac output
Deranged peripheral vasomotor control
Consequenses
Inadequate perfusion
Hypoxia, lactic acidosis
Stages of Shock
Early Stage
Compensatory mechanisms maintain perfusion of
vital organs
Include increased heart rate and increased peripheral
resistance
Progressive Stage
Compensatory systems no longer adequate with
tissue hypoperfusion
Onset of circulatory and metabolic imbalance,
especially metabolic acidosis from lactic acidemia
Irreversible Stage
Organ damage and metabolic disturbances
Survival not possible
Clinical consequences
Hypotension
Weak, rapid pulse (tachycardia)
Shallow rapid breathing (tachypnea)
Cool, damp, cyanotic skin
Tissue injuries are due to hypoxia