| [Search-frames] | [Search-no frames] | [UCHC Home] | [©] | [Feed Back] | [About] |
| Pulmonary Embolism |
| Etiology: • Most pulmonary emboli are from deep leg vein thrombi • Unclear what causes the thrombi to break loose and travel to the heart |
| Pathogenesis: • Conditions which promote deep vein stasis such as immobility, hypercoagulable states, and endothelial damage lead to thrombosis |
| Epidemiology: • Causes death in approximately 10% of adults dying in the hospital • 50,000 U.S. deaths/annum |
| General Gross Description: • Large or medium sized pulmonary artery involved • Deep reddish purple firm material containing some fibrin strands or lines of Zahn (alternating platelet and red cell layers) • May be quite adherent to vessel wall if organization has begun • Smaller strands of thrombus may extend into smaller vessels |
| General Microscopic Description: • Mixture of red blood cells, platelets and fibrin • Over a few days capillaries, smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts grow into the embolus from the pulmonary vessel wall • Surface of the embolus will become endothelialized • Recanalization may occur |
| Clinical Correlations: • Large emboli obstructing more than 1/2 pulmonary circulation may cause sudden death • Smaller emboli may result in nothing more severe than hemorrhage if sufficient bronchial vascular or collateral supply to distal parenchyma • If no other supply to the distal lung or underlying chronic pulmonary disease infarct results |
| References: • Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL. Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th edition. W.B. Saunders. Philadelphia 1994. pp.105-109, 111-112, 679. |