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IPLab:Lab 4:Atheromatous Emboli

Revision as of 19:49, 17 September 2015 by Peter Anderson (talk | contribs) (Virtual Microscopy)
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Contents

Clinical SummaryEdit

This 71-year-old male was admitted to the hospital with dry gangrene of the left great toe. Subsequently, he was found to have a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the left upper lobe of the lung. He developed a perforation of a duodenal ulcer with generalized peritonitis and died five days after admission.

Autopsy FindingsEdit

Gross examination of the aorta revealed severe atherosclerosis with extensive mural thrombus formation. Recent infarcts were noted in the spleen and in the left kidney. An old posterior myocardial infarct was noted. The left iliac artery also appeared to be almost totally occluded. A whitish-tan tumor was noted in the apical portion of the left upper lobe of the lung with metastases in the carinal and hilar lymph nodes.

ImagesEdit

Virtual MicroscopyEdit

Kidney: Atheromatous EmboliEdit

Normal KidneyEdit

Study QuestionsEdit


Additional ResourcesEdit

Related IPLab CasesEdit

Mural thrombosis is the formation of multiple thrombi along an injured endocardial wall.

A thrombus is a solid mass resulting from the aggregation of blood constituents within the vascular system.

Plural of embolus. An embolus is something that blocks the blood flow in a blood vessel. It may be a gas bubble, a blood clot, a fat globule, a mass of bacteria, or other foreign body. It usually forms somewhere else and travels through the circulatory system until it gets stuck.