2. Atherosclerosis Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of atherosclerosis

A

Degenerative disease of the tunica intima affecting large & medium- sized arteries, characterized by atheromas

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2
Q

Risk factors for atherosclerosis

A
  1. Higher incidence in developed countries
  2. Constitutional risk factors:
    - Age (although atherosclerosis is progressive, usually does not present clinically until middle age or later)
    - Gender (male > female)
    - Family history & genetics
  3. Modifiable risk factors:
    - Hyperlipidaemia (especially hypercholesterolemia)
    - Hypertension
    - Diabetes mellitus (induces hypercholesterolemia)
    - Cigarette smoking
  4. Additional risk factors:
    - Inflammation (C-reactive protein)
    - Hyperhomocystinemia (Inborn errors of metabolism [IEM] or acquired vitamin B12/folate deficiency)
    - Metabolic syndrome (glucose intolerance, hypertension, central obesity)
    - Lipoprotein (a) (altered form of LDL)
    - Lack of exercise
    - Type A personality
    - Factors affecting hemostasis
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3
Q

Pathogenesis of atherosclerosis

A

Sequence of events in atheroma formation

  1. Endothelial injury
    - Caused by: hypertension, smoking, hyperlipidemia, hemodynamic disturbances, toxins & cytokines, homocysteine, viral infections, immune reaction
    - Results in: increased endothelial permeability &
    enhanced leukocyte adhesion
  2. Lipoprotein accumulation in vessel wall
    - Occurs in a background of hyperlipidemia
    - Accumulation of LDL within intima (promoted by increased endothelial permeability)
    - LDL oxidation by oxygen free radicals locally generated by endothelial cells or macrophages
    - Oxidized LDL ingested by macrophages, intracellularly accumulated to form foam cells
    - Oxidized LDL also stimulates release of growth factors, cytokines & chemokines by endothelial cells
    & macrophages
  3. Monocyte migration
    - Monocyte adhesion to vessel wall
    - Migration into intima
    - Transformation into macrophages & foam cells
  4. Platelet adhesion
  5. Factor release
    - By activated platelets, macrophages & endothelium
    - Induces smooth muscle cell recruitment (either from
    media or circulating precursors)
  6. Smooth muscle cell proliferation & ECM production
    - Promoted by PDGF, FGF, TGF-alpha
    - Smooth muscle cells synthesize ECM (notably collagen) which stabilizes plaque
  7. Lipid accumulation (both extracellularly & within cells)
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4
Q

Progression of atheroma

A

Fatty streak → Fibrofatty plaque → Advanced plaque

  1. Fatty streak
    - Earliest lesion, prior to smooth muscle cell proliferation & ECM synthesis
    - Contains foamy macrophages
    - Not significantly raised
  2. Atheroma (both fibrofatty & advanced plaques)
    - Established lesion, after smooth muscle cell proliferation & ECM synthesis
    - 3 components: cells (macrophages, smooth muscle cells, T cells), ECM, lipid (both extra- & intracellular)
    - Structurally, made up of a superficial fibrous cap (smooth muscle cells, collagen) and a softer necrotic core deep to it (cholesterol crystals & cholesterol esters, cellular debris, foam cells)
    - Raised lesion, protrudes into vessel lumen
    - Note that atheroma composition is dynamic
  3. Advanced plaque (vulnerable plaque, unstable plaque)
    - Relatively smaller in size with a large lipid core & thin fibrous cap
    - More likely to undergo an acute plaque change (fissure, rupture, ulcerate, plaque hemorrhage)
    - Paradoxically, larger & often more occlusive plaques tend to be more stable (smaller lipid core, more fibrous tissue)
    - Intrinsic factors (increased MMP, decreased tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-TIMP)
    - Extrinsic factors (blood pressure, platelet reactivity, vasoconstriction)
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5
Q

Clinical consequences of atherosclerosis

A
  1. Chronic atherosclerotic stenosis
    - Gradual process of vessel luminal occlusion by
    growing plaque which compromises blood flow with
    resultant ischemic injury
    - Critical stenosis is point at which chronic occlusion
    significantly limits flow, and demand starts
    exceeding supply
    - Ischemic manifestations: stable angina, chronic
    ischemic heart disease, bowel ischemia, ischemic
    encephalopathy, intermittent claudication
  2. Acute plaque change
    - Rupture/fissuring (exposes thrombogenic plaque constituents, discharges atherosclerotic debris into bloodstream to produce atheroembolism)
    - Erosion/ulceration (exposes thrombogenic subendothelial basement membrane)
    - Hemorrhage into plaque (expands plaque volume and may secondarily promote plaque rupture)
  3. Aneurysm Formation
    - Atherosclerosis-induced pressure or ischemic atrophy of the underlying media with loss of elastic tissue weakens vessel wall
    - Predisposes to aneurysmal dilation
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