Week 4 Pre-Learning: CAD + Atherosclerosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is CAD? (4)

A

most common form of heart disease
- aka coronary heart disease, ischemic heart disease
- Second major cause of death in Canada
- Leading cause of hospitalization

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2
Q

Why does CAD occur?

A
  • Primary cause is atherosclerosis
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3
Q

What is atherosclerosis?

A
  • formation of fatty, fibrous plaque within the intima layer of the artery

injury of blood vessel that causes inflammation

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4
Q

Is atherosclerosis always symptomatic? (2)

A
  • Present in almost every human by the age of 15
  • Usually asymptomatic until a vessel is 75% occluded
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5
Q

What signs would you typically see with 75% occlusion? 90%?

A

70% - signs of ischemia with exertion
90% - Ischemia at rest

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6
Q

What is the role of endothelium in blood vessels? (2)

A
  • lines the blood vessels
  • separates the blood stream from the artery wall, preventing substances from the blood from moving into the blood vessel wall
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7
Q

How does atherosclerosis begin?

A

small injury to the endothelium lining

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8
Q

What are the characteristics of the tunica intima of the endothelium? (4)

A
  • innermost layer
  • keeps blood moving through the body
  • protects artery wall from coming in contact w/ toxins and substances that can cause harm
  • Allow blood to form without sticking to vessel lining
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9
Q

In the video, what is the role of the endothelium? (2)

A
  • Produces substances that prevent blood from clotting when it should not
  • If injury to these cells, cytokines release, causing inflammation (atherosclerosis)
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10
Q

What are the stages of atherosclerosis?

A
  1. Response to injury
  2. Fatty streak
  3. Fibrous plaque
  4. Complicated lesion
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11
Q

What are different types of damage to endothelium, causing chronic endothelial injury? (8)

A
  • HTN
  • smoking
  • hyperlipidemia
  • Hyperhomocysteinemia
  • Hemodynamic factors
  • toxins
  • viruses
  • immune reactions
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12
Q

What occurs in the response to injury? (3)

A
  1. Tear in lining, breaking the barrier
  2. LDL from the bloodstream enter intima layer and initiates inflammation
  3. Monocytes move to area and transform into macrophages, which engulf LDLs
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13
Q

What occurs in the fatty streak stage?

A
  1. Dead macrophages (foam cells) accumulate, creating fatty streaks
  2. Arterial wall is more bumpy, causing turbulent flow
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14
Q

What occurs in the fibrous plaque stage? (2, 4)

A
  1. Platelets and LDLs release platelet derived growth factor
    - this stimulates smooth muscle migration and thickening of the arterial walls
  2. Collagen and elastin are released, creating a fibrous cap over lipid pool
    - causes hardening and thickening of artery, taking up space and impairing blood flow
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15
Q

What occurs in the complicated lesion stage? (3, 4)

A
  1. As fibrous cap grows, it can become damaged and eroded
    - if too unstable, it can rupture, exposing artery wall
  2. Platelets rush to site, creating a thrombus
  3. Leads to occlusion and cell death
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16
Q

What triggers the inflammation process? (6, 11)

A
  1. HTN
    - high pressure + turbulent flow can cause physical damage to endothelial cells
  2. Tobacco use
    - nicotine causes the release of catecholamines, increasing HR, vasoconstriction, BP
    - Release of free radicals, leading to endothelial injury, increased LDLs
  3. Hyperlipidemia
    - increased LDLs, decrease HDLs
  4. Diabetes
  5. Homocysteinemia
    - increase in homocysteine, which is toxic to endothelium
  6. Viruses and toxins