42 - Vascular Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Examples of vascular diseases 1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

A

1) Atherosclerosis 2) Arteriosclerosis 3) Arteriolosclerosis 4) Aneurysm 5) Dissection

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2
Q

Arteriosclerosis

A

Any thickening or hardening of arteries. EG: When a vascular wall is damaged, collagen is deposited in intima, and the wall fibroses.

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3
Q

Sequelae to fibrosis of arterial wall 1) 2)

A

1) Impairs artery’s role in controlling blood pressure 2) Can impair blood supply to downstream tissues

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4
Q

Hyaline arteriolosclerosis 1) 2) 3)

A

1) Smooth muscle in media produces too much ECM 2) Intimal damage and thickening 3) Proteins from blood can leak across damaged endothelium

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5
Q

Potential sequelae of hyaline arteriolosclerosis 1) 2)

A

1) Poor blood supply to tissues 2) Microaneurysms, haemorrhage.

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6
Q

Benign nephrosclerosis

A

Ischemia of kidney from narrowed arterioles. Gross pathology is shrunken kidney with bumpy surface.

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7
Q

Kidney disease from narrowed arterioles

A

Benign nephrosclerosis

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8
Q

Atherosclerosis

A

A build-up of inflammatory, fibrotic, necrotic, fatty material in arteries. Fibroinflammatory lipid plaque (Atheroma).

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9
Q

Potential effects of atherosclerosis 1) 2)

A

1) Can rupture 2) Can cause stenosis of artery

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10
Q
A

L= Lumen F= Fibrous plaque C= Necrotic, fatty core

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11
Q

Stages of atherosclerosis formation 1) 2) 3) 4)

A
  1. Fatty streaks 2. Damage, inflammation, cholesterol and fibrosis 3. Stable atherosclerotic plaque 4. Unstable atherosclerotic plaque
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12
Q

Fatty streaks 1) 2)

A

1) Collection of foam cells in intima 2) Clinically insignificant

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13
Q

If fatty streaks are clinically insignificant, why are they implicated in atherosclerosis?

A

Develop at ostia and branch points where atheroscleroses are common

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14
Q

Structure of atherosclerosis 1) 2) 3)

A

1) Fibrous cap 2) Necrotic, fatty core 3) Chronic inflammatory cells

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15
Q

Stable angina

A

Heart pain when exerting oneself. Often from reduced blood flow to heart

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16
Q

Potential cause of stable angina

A

Atherosclerotic plaque

17
Q

Two ways in which pathologic calcification can arise

A

1) Dystrophic calcification 2) Metastatic calcification

18
Q

Dystrophic calcification

A

Appears in areas of cell degeneration EG: TB, atherosclerosis

19
Q

Metastatic calcification

A

When serum calcium and phosphate levels are too high. They reach precipitation threshold in blood, fall out of solution. Particularly implicated in kidney disease

20
Q

Characteristics of unstable plaques 1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

A

1) Prone to rupture 2) Thinner fibrous cap or ulceration 3) Larger necrotic core 4) More inflammatory cells 5) Less than 50% stenosis (makes them harder to detect)

21
Q

Effects of acute plaque events 1) 2) 3)

A

1) Thrombosis 2) Thromboembolism 3) Atheroembolism

22
Q

When does chronic ischaemia occur with atherosclerosis?

A

When over 70% stenosed

23
Q

Claudicaiton

A

Ischaemic leaking disease

24
Q

Why is endothelium implicated in atherosclerosis? 1) 2) 3)

A

Several risk factors involve endothelium 1) Hypertension has a low-grade shear effect 2) Smoking has toxic and pro-inflammatory effects 3) High blood sugar, lipids can damage endothelial wall

25
Q

Important condition to start of atherosclerosis

A

Activated endothelium (leaky, expression of adhesion molecules, produce cytokines, growth factors, changes from anti-coagulant, pro-coagulant)

26
Q

What does activated endothelium do in atherosclerosis? 1) 2) 3) 4)

A

1) Takes up LDL more avidly into the intima 2) Allows monocytes into intima, which phagocytose LDL and become foam cells 3) Macrophages release inflammatory cytokines, which forms a kind of positive feedback loop (EG: matrix metalloproteases degrade ECM) 4) LDL oxidises, forms ROS in intima, becomes actively toxic

27
Q

Role of smooth muscle cells in atherosclerosis 1) 2)

A

1) Migrate into intima, change phenotype 2) Can proliferate, produce ECM (increases fibrous cap thickness, reduces risk of plaque rupture)

28
Q

Aneurysm

A

Abnormal dilation of blood vessel or heart

29
Q

What causes an aneurysm?

A

Weakness in tunica media

30
Q

Types of aneurysm 1) 2) 3) 4)

A

1) Saccular (bulge on one side) 2) Fusiform (both sides bulge) 3) False aneurysm (hematoma) 4) False aneurysm (dissection)

31
Q

Aneurysm associated with atherosclerosis

A

Abdominal aortic aneurysm

32
Q

Abdominal aortic aneurysm 1) 2) 3) 4) 5)

A

1) Associated with atherosclerosis 2) Inflammatory environment weakens SCM (MMPs) 3) Intimal thickening interferes with wall perfusion 4) Risk of rupture increases above 5cm diameter 5) Often contains thrombus, which can embolise

33
Q

Berry aneurysm 1) 2) 3)

A

1) Aneurysm in Circle of Willis in the brain. 2) Weakening attributed to a congenital defect 3) Major cause of subarachnoid haemorrhage

34
Q

Dissection

A

Blood in the media under arterial pressure

35
Q

Types of dissections

A

Type A or B determine whether base of aorta is involved or not

36
Q

Association between hypertension and dissection

A

Over 90%

37
Q

What is normally affected by a dissection

A

Aorta, especially ascending aorta

38
Q

Possible sequelae of dissection 1) 2) 3)

A

1) Can involve or compress important arteries 2) Can rupture into pericardium (cardiac tamponade) 3) Can rupture into thorax (exsanguination)

39
Q

If a patient has survived a thrombosis, what is likely to happen to the thrombus?

A

Over time, a thrombus will undergo organisation and recanalisation. That is, macrophages will migrate in and fibroblasts and small blood vessels will grow into the thrombus from the wall of the artery i.e. forming granulation tissue. Macrophages will phagocytose dead cells and fibroblasts will form extracellular matrix. Ultimately scar tissue will form. New vessels may persist in the scar tissue, joining the proximal and distal lumina across the scar.

N.B. Organisation is the process of the formation of scar tissue via the formation of granulation tissue, which in this case will replace the thrombus. Recanalisation refers to the formation of new vessels in the granulation (and later scar) tissue through the occluded lumen. Passage of blood will be limited, however, and in the case of occluded arteries, the tissue supplied will already be dead.