Atherosclerosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is blood clotting also known as?

A

Thrombosis

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2
Q

When will a blood clot form in an artery?

A

When the blood vessel walls are damaged or when blood flows very slowly

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3
Q

What is the first stage in blood clotting?

A

Platelets stick to the damaged vessel and thromboplastin (enzyme) is released from the damaged tissue and platelets

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4
Q

What does thromboplastin need to work?

A

Calcium and vitamin K (carried in plasma)

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5
Q

What does thromboplastin change?

A

Prothrombin into thrombin (an enzyme)

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6
Q

What does thrombin change?

A

Soluble fibrinogen into insoluble fibrin

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7
Q

What do these platelets form over the damaged vessel

A

A platelet plug

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8
Q

How is the clot formed?

A

A fibrin mesh traps blood cells, forming a clot

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9
Q

Where does atherosclerosis normally occur?

A

In major arteries

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10
Q

What three things normally causes damage to the endothelium layer?

A

High blood pressure, toxins from cigarette smoke or an infection e.g. chlamydia

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11
Q

What happens to the vessel when the endothelium layer is damaged?

A

An inflammatory response is triggered

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12
Q

What happens when there is an inflammatory response?

A

White blood cells move into the vessel wall and lipids i.e. cholesterol enter the vessel wall

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13
Q

Why are the white blood cells actually making the situation worse?

A

because they engulf the lipids trapped in the wall and try to destroy them, they can’t break the lipids down so a fatty deposit builds up

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14
Q

What is formed because of the white blood cells and lipids?

A

An atheroma

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15
Q

How is a plaque formed?

A

calcium salts and fibrous tissue build up in the vessel wall so a hard swelling (plaque) forms.

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16
Q

Does the vessel become more/less elastic because of this plaque?

A

The vessel loses some of its elasticity

17
Q

What happens to the lumen because of the plaque?

A

The lumen becomes narrower, it is now called an advanced lesion

18
Q

How is a positive feedback loop created?

A

Because of the lumen becoming narrower its more difficult for the heart to pump blood therefore blood pressure is raised and the whole cycle starts all over again

19
Q

What are some consequences of atherosclerosis?

A

Angina, CHD, Stroke and aneurysms

20
Q

Why is angina caused?

A

Because the heart muscle lacks oxygen, it is forced to respire anaerobiclly - causing chest pain

21
Q

How is an aneurysm formed?

A

Because the artery has lost elasticity blood can build up behind it, the artery then bulges as it fills with blood and an aneurysm forms.

22
Q

When is an aneurysm likely to rupture?

A

At 6-7cm in diameter