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Obstruction or occlusion of a vessel by an embolus. [G. embolisma, a piece or patch; lit. something thrust in]
- air e. an e. caused by air bubbles in the vascular system; venous air e. can result from air introduced via intravenous lines, especially central lines, and generally must be substantial to block pulmonary blood flow and cause symptoms; arterial air e. is also usually iatrogenic, caused by cardiopulmonary bypass or other intravascular interventions, rarely after penetrating lung injury; small amounts of arterial air can cause death by blockage of coronary and/or cerebral arteries; small bubbles introduced into the venous system may similarly cause symptoms if they reach the arterial side. Cf.:paradoxical e.. SYN: gas e..
- amnionic fluid e. obstruction and constriction of pulmonary blood vessel s by amniotic fluid entering the maternal circulation, causing obstetric shock. SEE ALSO: amnionic fluid syndrome.
- atheromatous e. SYN: cholesterol e..
- cholesterol e. e. of lipid debris from an ulcerated atheromatous deposit, generally from a large artery to small arterial branches; it is usually small and rarely causes infarction. SYN: atheromatous e..
- cotton-fiber e. e. by cotton fibers from sterile gauze used in intravenous medication or transfusion; may form as foreign body granulomas in small pulmonary arteries.
- crossed e. SYN: paradoxical e..
- fat e. the occurrence of fat globules in the circulation following fractures of a long bone, in burns, in parturition, and in association with fatty degeneration of the liver; the emboli most commonly block pulmonary or cerebral vessels when symptoms referable to either or both of these regions appear. SYN: oil e..
- gas e. SYN: air e..
- hematogenous e. e. occurring via a blood vessel.
- oil e. SYN: fat e..
- paradoxical e. 1. obstruction of a systemic artery by an embolus originating in the venous system which passes through a septal defect, patent foramen ovale, or other shunt to the arterial system; 2. obstruction by a minute e. that passes through the pulmonary capillaries from the venous to the arterial system. SYN: crossed e..
- pulmonary e. e. of pulmonary arteries, most frequently by detached fragments of thrombus from a leg or pelvic vein, commonly when thrombosis has followed an operation or confinement to bed.
- pyemic e. plugging of an artery by an embolus detached from a suppurating source. SYN: infective e..
- retrograde e. e. of a vein by an embolus carried in a direction opposite to that of the normal blood current, after being diverted into a smaller vein. SYN: venous e..
- riding e. SYN: straddling e..
- saddle e. a straddling e. at any vascular bifurcation, e.g., of the aorta which occludes both common iliac arteries.
- straddling e. e. occurring at the bifurcation of an artery and blocking more or less completely both branches. SYN: riding e..
- tumor e. e. by neoplastic tissue transported from a tumor site and which may grow as a metastasis.
- venous e. SYN: retrograde e..
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em·bo·lism 'em-bə-.liz-əm n
1) the sudden obstruction of a blood vessel by an embolus
2) EMBOLUS
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n.
the condition in which an embolus becomes lodged in an artery and obstructs its blood flow. The most common form of embolism is pulmonary embolism, in which a blood clot is carried in the circulation to lodge in the pulmonary artery. An embolus in any other artery constitutes a systemic embolism. In this case a common source of the embolus is a blood clot within the heart in mitral valve disease or following myocardial infarction. The clinical features depend upon the site at which an embolus lodges (for example, a stroke may result from a cerebral embolism and gangrene caused by a limb embolism). Treatment is by anticoagulant therapy with heparin and warfarin. Major embolism is treated by embolectomy or streptokinase to remove or dissolve the embolus. See also air embolism.
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em·bo·lism (emґbə-liz-əm) [L. embolus, q.v.] the sudden blocking of an artery by a clot or foreign material which has been brought to its site of lodgment by the blood current.Medical dictionary. 2011.