Pericarditis & Atherosclerosis Flashcards
(22 cards)
list the cause of serous fluid seen in pericardial effusion
- CHF
- hypoalbuminemia
list the cause of serosanguineous fluid seen in pericardial effusion
- trauma
- malignancy
list the cause of chylous fluid seen in pericardial effusion
- mediastinal lymphatic obstruction
list the cause of blood (hemopericardium) fluid seen in pericardial effusion
- cardiac tamponade:
- rupture aortic dissection or MI or penetrating traumatic injury
primary pericarditis is usually ___ in origin and caused by ____
primary pericarditis is usually infectious in origin and caused by viruses
____ is the most common systemic disorder associated with pericarditis
uremia is the most common systemic disorder associated with pericarditis
list causes of secondary pericarditis
- uremia = most common systemic disorder associated with pericarditis
- MI, cardiac surgery
- radiation induced
- rheumatic fever
- SLE
- malignancies
fibrinous pericarditis is seen in ____
fibrous pericarditis = bread and butter - irregular shaggy
fibrinous pericarditis is seen in:
- RHD
- uremia
- post-MI
- post-viral
fibrinous and hemorrhagic pericarditis is seen in ____
fibrinous and hemorrhagic pericarditis is seen in malignancy
fibrinopurulent (suppurative) pericarditis is seen in ____
fibrinopurulent (suppurative) pericarditis is seen in bacterial pericarditis
caseous pericarditis is seen in ____
caseous pericarditis is seen in TB
list the outcomes of acute pericarditis
- resolution without clinical sequelae
- cause immediate hemodynamic complications if elicit large effusion
- progress to a chronic fibrosing process
- usually following caseous and suppurative pericarditis but can be idiopathic
- chronic constrictive pericarditis
describe the morphology of chronic pericarditis
- delicate adhesions to dense, fibrotic scars that obliterate the pericardial space
- extreme cases = heart is completely encase with dense scar tissue –> can’t expand –> constrictive pericarditis
list the top 4 modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis
- modifiable:
- hyperlipidemia
- HTN
- cigarette smoking
- DM
describe hyperlipidemia
- increased levels of LDL = bad cholesterol
- diabetes, nephrotic syndrome and hypothyroidism –> premature and severe atherosclerosis
low ___ and ____ intake can cause high ___ levels which can lead to atherosclerosis
low folate and B12 intake can cause high homocysteine levels which can lead to atherosclerosis
in hyperlipidemia, lipoproteins accumulate within the ___ which generate ____ lipids that have atherogenic properties
explain this
in hyperlipidemia, lipoproteins accumulate within the intima which generate oxidized lipids that have atherogenic properties
- ingested by macrophages –> foam cells
- stimulate release of cytokines –> chemotactic for circulating monocytes
- inhibits the motility of macrophages already in the lesion
macrophages release cytokines such as ___ and growth factors such as _____
macrophages release cytokines such as IL-1, TNF and growth factors such as SMC proliferation
smooth muscle proliferation converts fatty streaks into ____
smooth muscle proliferation converts fatty streaks into fibrofatty atheroma
____ are the precursor lesion of atherosclerotic plaques
fatty streaks are the precursor lesion of atherosclerotic plaques and is seen in all children older than 10
the key feature of atherosclerotic plaque is ___ thickening and ___ accumulation
the key feature of atherosclerotic plaque is intimal thickening and lipid accumulation
name the 3 principal components of atherosclerotic plaques
- cells = smooth muscle cells, macrophages, T-cells
- ECM = collagen, elastic fibers, proteoglycans
- intracellular and extracellular lipid deposits