Cardio Flashcards
Definition: Atherosclerosis
A disease of the arteries characterized by the deposition of fatty material on their inner walls
Where is atherosclerosis found?
Within peripheral and coronary arteries
What is involved in the structure of plaque?
Lipid, necrotic core, connective tissue, fibrous cap
What are the 4 main cell types involved in atherogenesis?
1) Endothelium cells
2) Macrophages
3) Smooth muscle cells
4) Platelets
What is the response to injury hypothesis in atherogenesis?
- Atherogenesis is initiated by an injury to the endothelial cells which leads to endothelial dysfunction
- Endothelial dysfunction leads to signals being sent to circulating leukocytes which then accumulate and migrate in vessel wall
- INFLAMMATION!
Which two substances allow leukocyte ahdesion and migration into vessels once inflammation has been initiated?
- Selectins: control rolling along endothelium
- Chemoattractants: produce concentration gradient and send signals which allows leukocytes to migrate to site of injury
Describe the stages of atherosclerosis progression
1: FATTY STREAKS - consists of aggregations of lipid-laden macrophages (foam cells) and T-lymphocytes within intimal layer
2: INTERMEDIATE LESIONS - consists of foam cells (release pro-inflammatory cytokines), vascular smooth muscle cells, T-lymphocytes, platelets aggregate and stick to vessel wall, isolated pools of extracellular lipid
3: FIBROUS PLAQUES OR ADVANCED LESIONS -
impedes blood flow, covered by fibrous cap made of ECM proteins (collagen, elastin), overlies lipid core and necrotic debris
4: PLAQUE RUPTURE - balance of plaque resorption an re-disposition is shifted due to increased enzyme activity, this degrades matrix and plaque ruptures. Haemorrhage of vessels and exposure of plaque contents; thrombus formation and vessel occlusion
5: PLAQUE EROSION - cap does not disrupt, luminal surface underneath clot may not have endothelium present but is rich with SMC
How is coronary artery disease treated? What was once an issue but isn’t any more?
PCI- percutaneous coronary intervention
Restenosis used to be an issue but is no longer due to drug elution on stents (Taxol and sirolimus commonly used)