Atherosclerosis Flashcards

1
Q

what is an atheroma

A

accumulation of intracellular and extracellular lipids in the intima and media of large and medium sized arteries

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2
Q

what are the 3 possible macroscopic features of atheromas

A
  • fatty streak
  • simple plaque
  • complicated plaque
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3
Q

what are fatty streaks

A

lipid depositions in the intima giving a yellow and slightly raised appearance

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4
Q

what are simple plaques

A

depositions of lipids giving raised white/yellow areas which are irregularly shaped and widely distributed
they can merge together to form large areas

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5
Q

what are complicated plaques

A

simple plaques which have had something happen to them e.g. a haemorrhage of the plaque, a thrombosis, calcification or aneurysm formation

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6
Q

where are the most common sites for atherosclerosis

A
  • aorta
  • coronary arteries
  • leg arteries
  • cerebral arteries
  • carotid arteries
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7
Q

what are the layers of normal arteries

A
  • endothelium
  • sub endothelium CT
  • internal elastic lamina
  • muscular media
  • external elastic lamina
  • adventita
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8
Q

what are the microscopic features of atheromas

A
  • proliferation of smooth muscle cells
  • accumulation of foam cells
  • extracellular lipid
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9
Q

what are some of the later microscopic changes seen in atheromas

A

fibrosis, necrosis, cholesterol clefts, inflammatory cells, disruption of internal elastic lamina and so damage extends to media and plaque fissuring

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10
Q

what is fissuring

A

a split of the plaque, which exposures the vessel wall so leads to a thrombosis

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11
Q

what are the clinical affects of atherosclerosis

A

ischaemic heart disease giving:

  • death
  • MI
  • angina
  • cardiac failure

Cerebral ischaemia giving:

  • cerebral infarction
  • dementia

Mesenteric Ischaemia giving:

  • malabsorption
  • intestinal infarction

Peripheral Ischaemia giving:
- gangrene
-intermittent claudication
Leriche syndrome

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12
Q

what is intermittent claudication

A

there is pain in the calf muscles when walking which reduces with rest

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13
Q

what increases the chance of atherosclerosis

A
  • age
  • gender
  • smoking
  • hyperlipidaemia
  • diabetes
  • alcohol
  • infection
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14
Q

which gender are better protected from atherosclerosis

A

women

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15
Q

why does hyperlipidaemia cause atherosclerosis

A

there is a high plasma cholesterol and so particularly more LDLs are deposited and HDLs are protective

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16
Q

what are the physical signs of hyperlipidaemia

A
  • arcus
  • tendon xanthomas
  • xanthelasma
17
Q

how does hypertension cause atherosclerosis

A

high pressure causes endothelial damage

18
Q

what factors cause hereditary predisposition of atherosclerosis

A
  • variations in apoprotein metabolism and receptors
19
Q

what is atherosclerosis

A

the thickening and hardening of the arterial walls as a result of atheromas

20
Q

what are the 4 theories of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis

A
  • thrombogenic theory
  • insudation theory
  • monoclonal hypothesis
  • reaction to cell injury
21
Q

what is the thrombogenic theory

A

that plaques formed due to repeated lipid derived thrombi with an overlying fibrous cap

22
Q

what is the insudation theory

A

where endothelial injury causes inflammation and increases the permeability of lipid from plasma

23
Q

what is the reaction to cell injury hypothesis

A

where plaques form in response to endothelial injury which increases permeability and allows platelet adhesion. monocytes can enter endothelium and smooth muscle cells proliferate and migrate

24
Q

what is the monoclonal hypothesis

A

where each plaque is monoclonal representing abnormal growth control

25
what are the cells involved in atherosclerosis
- endothelial cells - platelets - smooth muscle cells - macrophages - lymphocytes - neutrophils
26
what do the endothelial cells do in atherosclerosis
cause an altered permeability to lipoproteins, cause the production of collagen and stimulate proliferation and migration of smooth muscle cells
27
what do the platelets do in atherosclerosis
involved in homoeostasis, stimulation proliferation and migration of smooth muscle cells
28
what do the smooth muscle cells do in atherosclerosis
take up LDLs and other lipids to become foam cells | synthesise collagen and proteoglycans
29
what do the macrophages do in atherosclerosis
oxidise LDLs take up lipids to become foam cells secrete proteases which modify the matrix stimulate proliferation and migration of smooth muscle cells
30
what do the lymphocytes do in atherosclerosis
they secrete TNF which affects lipoprotein metabolism | stimulate proliferation and migration of smooth muscle cells
31
what do the neutrophils do in atherosclerosis
secrete proteases leading to continued local damage and inflammation
32
what causes endothelial damage
raised LDL toxins hypertension stress
33
what does endothelial damage cause
``` platelet adhesion growth factor release smooth muscle proliferation and migration LDL oxidation lipid uptake by SMC and macrophages monocyte migration to intima ```
34
what do foam cells do
further stimulate SMCs and recruit other inflammatory cells
35
what can prevent atherosclerosis
no smoking, reduced fat intake, treat hypertension, limit alcohol, exercise