Pathoma - HTN, Arteriosclerosis, Vascular tumors Flashcards

1
Q

What are the effects of ATII

A

(1) Promoting adrenal release of aldosterone
(2) Contracting arteriolar smooth muscle

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2
Q

What is fibromuscular dysplasia and what population does it usually occur in?

A

Developmental defect of the blood vessel wall, resulting in irregular thickening of large- and medium-sized arteries, especially the renal artery

Is an important cause of stenosis in young female vs. atherosclerosis as a cause of stenosis in elderly males

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3
Q

What are the 3 types of arteriosclerosis and describe them

A

(1) Atherosclerosis (intimal thickening in large vessels)
(2) Arteriolosclerosis (small vessels)
(3) Monckeberg medial calcific sclerosis (thickening of media)

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4
Q

Describe the plaques of atherosclerosis

A

Necrotic lipid core (mostly cholesterol) with a fibromuscular cap

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5
Q

What are the 4 most common arteries involved in athersclerosis?

A

Abdominal aorta

Coronary artery

Popliteal artery

Internal carotid artery

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6
Q

What are the modifiable risks of atherosclerosis?

A

Smoking, HTN, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia

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7
Q

Describe the components of a fatty streak

A

Collection of macrophages containing oxidized lipids (foam cells)

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8
Q

What are the 4 consequences of atherosclerosis?

A

(1) Stenosis
(2) Plaque rupture with thrombosis
(3) Plaque rupture with embolization
(4) Aneurysm (due to plaque blocking blood flow to wall)

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9
Q

What are the 2 types of arteriolosclerosis

A

(1) Hyaline arteriolosclerosis
(2) Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis

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10
Q

Describe hyaline arteriolosclerosis and the two causes

A

Vascular thickening due to proteins leaking into the vessel wall

Caused by:

(1) Benign HTN (high BP pushes protein into wall)
(2) Diabetes (non-ezymatic glycosylation of the basement membrane makes the wall leaky)

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11
Q

Describe hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis and its cause

A

Thickening of vessel wall by hyperplasia of the smooth muscle (“onion-skin”)

Causes by malignant HTN

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12
Q

What is Monckeberg medial calcific sclerosis and its clinical presentation

A

Calcification of the media of muscular (medium-sized) arteries

Is clinically insignificant (no luminal narrowing)

Seen as incidental findings on X-ray or mammography

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13
Q

Describe the layers of the aorta affected by aortic dissection

A

Intimal tear with dissection of blood through the media

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14
Q

What are the 2 necessary criteria for a dissection to occur?

A

High stress & pre-existing weakness of the media (e.g. Marfan’s or Ehlers-Danlos)

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15
Q

Describe the defect and presentation of Marfan’s syndrome

A

Defect in fibrillin (scaffold for elastin)

Arachnodactyly, lens dislocation (upward), aortic dissection, hyperflexible joints

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16
Q

Describe the defect and presentation of Ehler’s Danlos syndrome

A

Classical type (joint and skin) caused by defeciency in Type V collagen

Vascular type caused by deficiency in Type III collagen

Hyperextensible skin, hypermobile joints, tendency to bleed

17
Q
A
18
Q

Describe the mechanism behind HTN as a risk factor for aortic dissection

A

HTN results in hyaline arteriolosclerosis of the vasa vasorum (blood supply running through the adventitia)

Decreased flow leads to atrophy and weakening of the media, which increases risk for dissection

19
Q

What is the classic disease associated with thoracic aneurysm?

A

Tertiary syphilis

Endartertitis of the vaso vasorum results in luminal narrowing, decreased flow, and atrophy of the vessel wall

Fibrosis secondary to inflammation results in a “tree bark” appearance of aorta

20
Q

Where along the aorta does an abdominal aneurysm usually occur?

A

Below the renal arteries but above the aortic bifurcation

21
Q

Major cause of abd aortic aneurysm

A

Atherosclerosis (increases the diffusion barrier to get O2 to the media)

22
Q

Triad of presentation in abd aortic rupture?

A

Hypotension

Pulsatile abd mass

Flank pain

23
Q

Hemangioma (benign/malignant; areas involved; treatment)

A

Benign tumor comprised of blood vessels (blanchable)

Most often involves skin and liver

Often regresses during childhood

24
Q

Angiosarcoma (benign/malignant; areas involved; risk exposures)

A

Malignant proliferation of endothelial cells

Common sites: skin, breast, and liver

25
Q

Common exposures causing hepatic angiosarcoma

A

Hepatic angiosarcoma associated with exposure to vinyl chloride and arsenic

26
Q

Cause and presentation of Kaposi sarcoma

A

Malignant proliferation of endothelial cells, associated with HHV-8

Purple patches, plaques, and nodules on the skin and visceral organs (mouth, GI tract)

27
Q

At-risk populations for Kaposi Sarcoma

A

Older Eastern European males

AIDS

Transplant recipients

28
Q

What disease is often mistaken for Kaposi sarcoma and how do ou differentiate the two?

A

Bacillary angiomatosis caused by Bartonella henselae

Bartonella will have neutrophilic infiltrate and Kaposi will have lymphocytic infiltrate