General and Systemic Histopathology, C601&C602 Slide 14: Lung with pulmonary embolus They are both what might
be called "pathological blood clots." Remember, not all clots are problems.
In fact, there are plenty of situations in which you want your blood to
clot quickly, but obviously you want the clot stay put and form only where
it is needed. A thrombus is a clot in the intact vascular system. The embolus
is the clot that breaks free and is floating along in the intact vascular
system. Of course, it's going to eventually come to a vessel to small to
pass through and get stuck, causing serious shortage of blood downstream.
Emboli are not necessarily vagrant blood clots. Any space occupying lesion
moving along in the blood flow could be considered an embolus. For example:
pieces of bone following a really bad fracture, amniotic fluid, bullets
and even air.
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