Title: EDEMA, HEMORRHAGE, CONGESTION AND SHOCK
1EDEMA, HEMORRHAGE, CONGESTION AND SHOCK
- Anjali Shinde, MD
- Department of Pathology
- Mount Sinai Hospital
- Chicago
2Overview-focus on hemodynamics and hemostasis
- Edema (increased fluid in the extracellular
matrix) - Hyperemia (increased flow)
- Congestion (increased backup)
- Hemorrhage (extravasation)
- Hemostasis (keeping blood as a fluid)
- Thrombosis (clotting blood)
- Embolism (downstream travel of a clot)
- Infarction (death of tissues w/o blood)
- Shock (circulatory failure/collapse)
- Pages 111-115, 121-132 in Robbins Pathologic
basis of disease, eight edition
3A. Edema
- Approx. 60 of lean body weight is water
- 2/3 intracellular, 1/3 extracellular
- Abnormal increase in interstitial fluid within
tissues is edema - Fluid collection in different body cavities
- Hydrothorax, hydropericardium, ascities, anascara
4Edema
Any imbalance in the above mechanisms leads to
edema
5Pathophysiologic categories of edema 1.
Increased hydrostatic pressure
- Impaired venous return due to
- Constrictive pericarditis
- Congestive heart failure
- Ascites
- Venous obstruction or compression by thrombosis,
external pressure or lower extremity inactivity - Arteriolar dilatation
- Heat
- Neurohumoral dysregulation
-
6Pathophysiologic categories of edema (contd) 2.
Reduced plasma oncotic pressure
- Protein losing glomerulopathies-leaky capillaries
cause loss of albumin - Liver cirrhosis- reduced albumin synthesis
- Malnutrition
- Protein losing gastroenteropathy
7Reduced plasma oncotic pressure
8Pathophysiologic categories of edema (contd) 3.
Lymphatic obstruction
- Impaired lymphatic drainage leads to lymphedema
- Inflammatory
- Neoplastic
- Postsurgical
- Postirradiation
- Lymphedema egs.
- Filiariasis causing elephantiasis
- irradiation of breast and axilla for
treatment of breast cancer - causing upper limb edema
9Pathophysiologic categories of edema (contd) 4.
Sodium and water retention
- Excessive water intake with renal insufficiency
- Increased tubular reabsorption of sodium due to
renal hypoperfusion and increased oncotic
pressure - Increased salt retention-with obligate
associated water-causes both increased
hydrostatic pressure (due to intravascular fluid
volume expansion) and diminished vascular colloid
osmotic pressure (due to dilution).
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11Edema-morphology
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13Clinical consequences of edema
- Subcutaneous edema signals potential cardiac or
renal disease - Pulmonary edema impedes oxygen diffusion mostly
left ventricular failure, also renal failure,
acute respiratory distress syndrome, pulmonary
infection - Brain edema- herniation of brain
- stem or impedes vascular
- supply to brain stem
14B. Hyperemia and Congestion
- Hyperemia and congestion- locally increased blood
volumes. - Hyperemia - active process of arteriolar dilation
-increased blood flow-erythema due to
engorgement of vessels with oxygenated blood. - Eg inflammation, muscle during exercise
- Congestion - passive process-reduced outflow of
blood from a tissue. - Eg. cardiac failure, venous obstruction-cyanosi
s- due to red cell stasis and the accumulation of
deoxygenated hemoglobin-edema
15Chronic passive Congestion-lung
- chronic passive congestion (lung) causes
-
- lack of blood flow
-
- chronic hypoxia
- ischemic tissue injury and scarring
-
- septa are thickened and fibrotic, alveoli
contain hemosiderin-laden macrophages called
heart failure cells. -
16Acute and passive congestion-Liver
-
- Acute hepatic congestion
- -central vein and sinusoids are
distended -centrilobular hepatocytes are
ischemic -periportal hepatocytes (better
oxygenated because of proximity to hepatic
arterioles)develop fatty change.
17Chronic passive congestion-Liver
- chronic passive hepatic congestion
- -centrilobular regions are grossly red-brown
and slightly depressed and accentuated
against the surrounding zones of uncongested
tan liver (nutmeg liver) - -Microscopically, there is centrilobular
hemorrhage, hemosiderin-laden macrophages,
degeneration of hepatocytes.
Centrilobular zone-area of least perfusion
Normal liver
Nutmeg liver
18C. Hemorrhage
- Hemorrhage- extravasation of blood into the
extravascular space - Capillary bleeding can occur under conditions of
chronic congestion - Increased tendency to hemorrhage (usually with
insignificant injury) occurs in a variety of
clinical disorders that are collectively called
hemorrhagic diatheses. - Rupture of a large artery or vein results in
severe hemorrhage and is almost always due to
vascular injury, including trauma,
atherosclerosis, or inflammatory or neoplastic
erosion of the vessel wall.
19Hemorrhage
- Hemorrhage may be external or
- contained within a tissue hematoma.
- Minute 1- to 2-mm hemorrhages
- into skin, mucous membranes,
- or serosal surfaces are called petechiae,
- most commonly associated with locally
- increased intravascular pressure,
- low platelet counts (thrombocytopenia),
- or defective platelet function (as in uremia)
- Slightly larger (3 mm) hemorrhages
- are called purpura, associated with
- many of the same disorders that cause petechiae
or - can be secondary to trauma, vascular
inflammation - (vasculitis), or increased vascular fragility
- (e.g., in amyloidosis).
20Hemorrhage
- Larger (gt1 to 2 cm) subcutaneous hematomas (i.e.,
bruises) are called ecchymoses. The red cells in
these lesions are degraded and phagocytized by
macrophages the hemoglobin (red-blue color) is
then enzymatically converted into bilirubin
(blue-green color) and eventually into
hemosiderin (gold-brown color), accounting for
the characteristic color changes in a bruise. - Depending on the location, a large accumulation
of - blood in a body cavity is denoted as a
- hemothorax, hemopericardium, hemoperitoneum,
- or hemarthrosis (in joints).
21Hemorrhage
- Clinical significance of hemorrhage- depends on
the volume and rate of bleeding. - -Rapid loss of up to 20 of blood volume/slow
losses of even larger amounts- little impact in
healthy adults - - greater losses-can cause hemorrhagic
(hypovolemic) shock - Site of hemorrhage- Intracranial hemorrhage can
result in an increase in pressure that is
sufficient to compromise the blood supply or to
cause the herniation of the brainstem - Chronic or recurrent external blood loss (e.g.,
peptic ulcer or menstrual bleeding)- iron
deficiency anemia.
22D. Shock
- Shock -characterized by systemic hypotension due
either to reduced cardiac output or to reduced
effective circulating blood volume. - Final common pathway for several potentially
lethal clinical events, including severe
hemorrhage, extensive trauma or burns, large
myocardial infarction, massive pulmonary
embolism, and microbial sepsis. - Consequences are impaired tissue perfusion and
cellular hypoxia. Cellular injury is reversible
in beginning prolonged shock eventually leads to
irreversible tissue injury -fatal
23Causes of Shock
-
- Cardiogenic shock results from low cardiac output
due to myocardial pump failure. This can be due
to intrinsic myocardial damage (infarction),
ventricular arrhythmias, extrinsic compression
(cardiac tamponade), or outflow obstruction
(e.g., pulmonary embolism) - Hypovolemic shock results from low cardiac output
due to the loss of blood or plasma volume, such
as can occur with massive hemorrhage or fluid
loss from severe burns - Septic shock results from vasodilation and
peripheral pooling of blood as part of a systemic
immune reaction to bacterial or fungal infection
24Septic shock
- Septic shock is associated with severe
hemodynamic and hemostatic derangements - Can have a mortality rate near 20
- Septic shock ranks first among the causes of
death in intensive care units - Its incidence is rising, ironically due to
improvements in life support for critically ill
patients and the growing population of
immunocompromised hosts (due to chemotherapy,
immunosuppression, or HIV infection) - Currently, septic shock is most frequently
triggered by gram-positive bacterial infections,
followed by gram-negative bacteria and fungi.
25Septic shock
- In septic shock, systemic vasodilation and
pooling of blood in the periphery - tissue
hypoperfusion - widespread endothelial cell
activation and injury, often leading to a
hypercoagulable state that can manifest as DIC - Septic shock is associated with changes in
metabolism that directly suppress cellular
function. The net effect of these abnormalities
is hypoperfusion and dysfunction of multiple
organs-culminating in morbidity and mortality
associated with sepsis.
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27Septic shock
- Metabolic abnormalities.-
- Septic patients have insulin resistance and
hyperglycemia. Cytokines such as TNF and IL-1,
stress-induced hormones (such as glucagon, growth
hormone, and glucocorticoids), and catecholamines
all drive gluconeogenesis. - Pro-inflammatory cytokines suppress insulin
release while simultaneously promoting insulin
resistance in the liver and other tissues, likely
by impairing the surface expression of GLUT-4, a
glucose transporter. - Hyperglycemia decreases neutrophil
function-thereby suppressing bactericidal
activity-and causes increased adhesion molecule
expression on endothelial cells. - Initially there is an acute surge in
glucocorticoid production, then there is adrenal
insufficiency and a functional deficit of
glucocorticoids. This may stem from depression of
the synthetic capacity of intact adrenal glands
or frank adrenal necrosis due to DIC
(Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome)
28Shock
- Immune suppression.- Sepsis can activate
counter-regulatory immunosuppressive mechanisms,
possibly causing a shift from pro-inflammatory
(TH1) to anti-inflammatory (TH2) cytokines - Organ dysfunction.- Systemic hypotension,
interstitial edema, and small vessel thrombosis
all decrease the delivery of oxygen and nutrients
to the tissues. High levels of cytokines and
secondary mediators may diminish myocardial
contractility and cardiac output, and increased
vascular permeability and endothelial injury can
lead to the adult respiratory distress syndrome - This may lead to failure of multiple organs,
particularly the kidneys, liver, lungs, and
heart, culminating in death.
29Shock
- Severity and outcome of septic shock are
dependent upon the extent and virulence of the
infection, the immune status of the host the
presence of other co-morbid conditions and the
pattern and level of mediator production. - Standard of care remains treatment with
appropriate antibiotics, intensive insulin
therapy for hyperglycemia, fluid resuscitation to
maintain systemic pressures and corticosteroids
to correct relative adrenal insufficiency - An additional group of secreted bacterial
proteins called superantigens also cause a
syndrome similar to septic shock (e.g., toxic
shock syndrome). Superantigens are polyclonal
T-lymphocyte activators that induce the release
of high levels of cytokines that result in a
variety of clinical manifestations, ranging from
a diffuse rash to vasodilation, hypotension, and
death.
30Stages of shock- non progressive phase
- In the early nonprogressive phase of shock,
neurohumoral mechanisms maintain cardiac output
and blood pressure. eg baroreceptor reflexes,
catecholamine release, activation of the
renin-angiotensin axis, ADH release, and
generalized sympathetic stimulation. The net
effect is tachycardia, peripheral
vasoconstriction, and renal conservation of
fluid, cool skin If the underlying causes are not
corrected, shock passes into progessive phase
31Shock- progressive phase
- Progressive phase- there is tissue hypoxia
- If there is persistent oxygen deficit,
intracellular aerobic respiration is replaced by
anaerobic glycolysis with excessive production of
lactic acid. The resultant metabolic lactic
acidosis lowers the tissue pH and blunts the
vasomotor response arterioles dilate, and blood
begins to pool in the microcirculation. - Peripheral pooling worsens cardiac output, and
can cause anoxic injury with subsequent DIC. - With widespread tissue hypoxia, vital organs are
affected and begin to fail.
32Stages of shock
- Without intervention, the process eventually
enters an irreversible stage. - Widespread cell injury is reflected in lysosomal
enzyme leakage - Myocardial contractile function worsens in part
because of nitric oxide synthesis. - If ischemic bowel allows intestinal flora to
enter the circulation, bacteremic shock may be
superimposed - There can be complete renal shutdown as a result
of acute tubular necrosis - At this stage, there can be a downward clinical
spiral which almost inevitably culminates in
death.
33Shock- Morphology
- Changes of hypoxic injury brain, heart,
lungs, kidneys, adrenals, and gastrointestinal
tract most affected. - Adrenal changes in shock increased synthesis of
steroids - Kidney- acute tubular necrosis
- lungs -are seldom affected in pure hypovolemic
shock, because they are somewhat resistant to
hypoxic injury. In bacterial sepsis or trauma,
changes of diffuse alveolar damage are seen - In septic shock, the development of DIC-
fibrin-rich microthrombi, particularly in the
brain, heart, lungs, kidney, adrenal glands, and
gastrointestinal tract.- consumption of platelets
and coagulation factors also often leads to the
appearance of petechial hemorrhages on serosal
surface and the skin - Except neuronal and myocyte ischemic loss,
virtually all of these tissues may revert to
normal if the individual survives. Unfortunately,
most patients with irreversible changes due to
severe shock die before the tissues can recover
34DIC
Tubular necrosis in kidney
35Shock- less common types
- Shock can occur in the setting of anesthetic
accident or a spinal cord injury (neurogenic
shock), as a result of loss of vascular tone and
peripheral pooling of blood. - Anaphylactic shock- systemic vasodilation and
increased vascular permeability caused by an
IgE-mediated hypersensitivity reaction causing
acute widespread vasodilation, tissue
hypoperfusion and hypoxia.
36Clinical consequences of shock
- Clinical manifestations of shock depend on the
precipitating insult. In hypovolemic and
cardiogenic shock the patient presents with
hypotension, a weak, tachypnea and cool, clammy,
cyanotic skin. In septic shock the skin may
initially be warm and flushed because of
peripheral vasodilation. The initial threat to
life stems from the underlying catastrophe that
precipitated the shock (e.g., myocardial infarct,
severe hemorrhage, or sepsis). - Rapidly, however, the cardiac, cerebral, and
pulmonary changes secondary to shock worsen the
problem. Eventually, electrolyte disturbances and
metabolic acidosis also exacerbate the situation.
- Individuals who survive the initial complications
may enter a second phase dominated by renal
insufficiency and marked by a progressive fall in
urine output as well as severe fluid and
electrolyte imbalances.
37Clinical consequences of shock
- Prognosis varies with the origin of shock and its
duration. - Greater than 90 of young, healthy patients with
hypovolemic shock survive with appropriate
management - Septic shock or cardiogenic shock associated with
extensive myocardial infarction, can have
substantially worse mortality rates, even with
optimal care.