20. Common CVDs part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Risk of stable vs. unstable blockage.

A
  • Stable blockage up to 65% causes a plumbing prob in which you can’t deliver enough blood during exercise
  • Unstable blockage of 33-40% can rupture into the lumen of the vessel and trigger a clot –> fatal
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2
Q

Describe the progression of atheromas in blood vessels w/ age.

A
  • Progresses slowly, over decades
  • Foam cell –> fatty streak –> intermediate lesions –> atheroma –> fibrous plaque –> complicated lesion rupture of unstable cap
  • Once fibrous plaque is reached, not reversible
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3
Q

What is the effect of risk factors in the progression of atheromas?

A

Risk factors speed up progression

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4
Q

What are foam cells?

A

Phagocytic white blood cells, usually macrophages, that ingest large volumes of sub-endothelia lipid droplets

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5
Q

List the atherogenic effects of smoking.

A
  • Endothelial damage
  • Increased platelet adhesion
  • Pro-inflammatory
  • Arterial wall hypoxia
  • Increased LDL oxidation
  • Reduced HDL cholesterol
  • Increased blood viscosity
  • Impaired endothelial-mediated vasodilation
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6
Q

What % of circulating blood cholesterol does dietary cholesterol contribute?

A
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7
Q

What are the dietary modulators of plasma cholesterol?

A
  • Increase in dietary saturated (animal) fat
  • Increase in excess body fat stores
  • Decrease in dietary fiber (esp water soluble)
  • Increase in dietary cholesterol
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8
Q

What is the normal value for total cholesterol?

A
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9
Q

What is the normal value for HDL cholesterol?

A

> 40 mg/dl

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10
Q

Contrast the structure of LDL and HDL.

A
  • HDL has a large # of lipoproteins and a smaller amount of cholesterol
  • LDL is mostly fat and not much protein
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11
Q

What is the single best intervention for raising HDL?

A

Exercise

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12
Q

What directly lowers HDL?

A

Smoking

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13
Q

What is LDL mostly controlled by?

A

Dietary intervention

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14
Q

What is HDL’s role in plaque regression?

A

Reverse cholesterol transport

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15
Q

What are the beneficial effects of HDL?

A
  • Anti-inflammatory
  • Anti-thrombotic (blood clotting)
  • Antioxidant
  • Anti-apoptotic (cell death)
  • Reverse cholesterol transport
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16
Q

List the natural first presentations of coronary artery disease. What % of CAD present this way?

A
  • 15-20% sudden death
  • 45-55% myocardial infarction
  • 35-40% angina
17
Q

What does a narrowed lumen result in? Blocked lumen?

A
  • Narrowed lumen –> exertional ischemia

- Blocked lumen –> MI or death

18
Q

What is angina? Symptoms?

A
  • Subjective experience of ischemia elicited by exercise or emotional stress
  • Vague, aching, squeezing, or burning
19
Q

What is a significant contributor of angina?

A

Impaired vasodilatory ability

20
Q

What is the benefit of exposing an atheroma by exercise as opposed to waiting?

A
  • Waiting for resting sx reveals 90% stenoses

- Exercise may reveal atheromas as small as 60-65%

21
Q

Stable vs. Unstable plaque.

A
STABLE:
-small lipid pool
-thick fibrous cap
-preserved lumen
UNSTABLE:
-large lipid pool
-thin fibrous cap
-many inflammatory cells
22
Q

Stable vs. Unstable angina/ischemia

A
STABLE:
-lumen narrowed by plaque
-inappropriate vasoconstriction
UNSTABLE:
-plaque rupture
-platelet aggregation
-thrombus formation
-unopposed vasoconstriction
23
Q

What is acute coronary syndromes?

A

Sudden, severe alterations in coronary flow leading to unstable angina and may become acute MIs

24
Q

What causes 90% of acute coronary syndromes?

A

Rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque, leading to platelet aggregation and formation of a thrombus