- •13. Disturbances of the peripheral blood circulation
- •13.1. Name the main forms of the local disturbances of blood circulation:
- •13.2. What is arterial hyperemia?
- •13.3. What functional changes and clinical attributes characterize arterial hyperemia?
- •13.4. What factors can be a cause of arterial hyperemia? What mean the physiological and pathological arterial hyperemia?
- •13.5. Name the main mechanisms of the pathological arterial hyperemia development.
- •13.6. What is the essence of the neurotonic mechanism of development of the arterial hyperemia ?
- •13.7. Explain the neuroparalytic mechanism of development of the arterial hyperemia.
- •13.8. What humoral factors can be the cause of development of arterial hyperemia?
- •13.9. What is the role of endothelium of blood vessels in development of arterial hyperemia?
- •13.10. Name possible outcomes of arterial hyperemia.
- •13.11. What is venous hyperemia?
- •13.12. What factors can be the cause of venous hyperemia?
- •13.13. What attributes display venous hyperemia?
- •13.14. What local and common violations can be consequence of venous hyperemia?
- •13.15. What is ischemia?
- •13.16. What attributes are typical for ischemia?
- •13.17. Name the main types of ischemia depending on the reason and mechanisms of its occurrence.
- •13.18. How are defined the character of metabolic, functional and structural disturbances in a tissue in case of its ischemia?
- •13.19. What consecutive stages characterize the pathogenesis of alterations in ischemic tissues?
- •13.20. What is stasis?
- •13.21. Name the main variants of stasis and their reasons.
- •13.22. What is the thrombosis?
- •13.23. Name three major factors, promoting thrombosis formation (Virhov’s triad).
- •13.24. What phases is the process of blood clot forming consists of? What is their essence?
- •13.25. What negative consequences can thrombosis formation in pathology have?
- •13.26. What is embolism?
- •13.27. What kinds of embolism are assigned?
- •13.28. Name principal causes of embolism exogenous.
- •13.29. Name the principal causes of embolism of endogenous origins.
- •13.31. What is the essence of a phenomenon called "sludge"?
- •13.32. How the exchange of water between plasma of blood and an interstitial liquid is carried out?
- •13.33. How does hydrostatic and oncotic pressure of blood and an intercellular liquid changes influence on intensity of processes of a filtration-reabsorption of water in capillaries?
- •13.34. What is the insufficiency of lymphokinesia? Name its main forms.
13.34. What is the insufficiency of lymphokinesia? Name its main forms.
Insufficiency lymphokinesia –it’s a state of inability of lymphatic vessels to carry out their main function - realization of a constant and effective drainage of interstitium.
The following forms of insufficiency lymphokinesia are distinguished.
1. Mechanical insufficiency. It is shown by difficulty of outflow of lymph because of presence of organic (pinching a tumour or a cicatrix, an obliteration of lymphatic vessels at their inflammation, a thrombosis, etc.) or the functional reasons (increase of pressure in the main venous vessels, a spasm of lymphatic vessels, the discontinuance of muscular reductions, etc.).
2. Dynamic insufficiency. It arises when the volume of transudation of interstitial liquid exceeds opportunities of lymphatic system to provide an effective drainage of intercellular space.
3. Resorbtion insufficiency. It is caused by structural changes of interstitial tissue, accumulation of fibers and sedimentation of their pathological kinds in interstitium.
The main displays of insufficiency of lymphokinesia in acute stage are the hypostasis, accumulation of fibers and products of their disintegration in interstitial space, and in a chronic stage - development of fibrosis and of sclerosis.