Haemorrhagic Effusion
Revision as of 11:21, 10 June 2010 by Bara (talk | contribs) (Created page with '*Turbid - red *Specific gravity 1.025 - 1.040 *Total protein > 30g/L *Nucleated cells 1.5 - 10 x 10e9/L *WBC from peripheral blood (including [[Neutrophils - WikiBlood|neutroph…')
- Turbid - red
- Specific gravity 1.025 - 1.040
- Total protein > 30g/L
- Nucleated cells 1.5 - 10 x 10e9/L
- WBC from peripheral blood (including neutrophils and macrophages)
- Recent or iatrogenic
- Erythrocytes
- Platelet clumps
- Long standing haemorrage
- Macrophages with erythrophagia of haeme pigment
- In horses in addition to the above
- Haemorrhagic diapedesis
- Leakage of blood and fluid from the gut secondary to compromised vascular supply and venous return
- Seen with interstitial necrosis/ischaemia
- Fluid appears serosanguinous
- Haemorrhagic diapedesis
Due to
- Most commonly seen in cats and dogs due to traumatic injury to the liver (e.g. infectious canine hepatitis), spleen (e.g. haemangiosarcoma) and kidney
- Warfarin toxicity
- Moldy sweet clover hay fed to pregnant cows may bleed from umbilical vessels into peritoneum
- Manual ablation of corpus luteum in cattle