L21 Flashcards
Define atherosclerosis
Hardening of ARTERIES
What layer of arteries does atherosclerosis start in? Name all the layers for completeness.
Intima
Endothelium - intima - media - adventitia
What is CAD become once symptomatic?
CHD that might present as:
- Chronic, stable angina
- Acute coronary syndromes
- CHF
- Sudden death
What is the earliest visible sign of atherosclerosis?
Fatty streak
Earliest b/c visible but no change to blood flow
Which 3 molecules are released by endothelium for anti-thrombotic and anti-vasoconstriction?
NO
Prostacyclin
Bradykinin
Clot representative!
If you +ACh to functioning endothelium, what should the response be?
NO –> smooth muscle relaxation = vasodilation
Dysfxnal endothelium: no change or constriction to same stimulus
Test to eval health of endothelium non-invasively?
Brachial artery reactivity test
- 5 mins BP cuff –> let go –> shear stress should induce vasodilation
How does high cholesterol effect endothelial fxn?
High cholesterol –> worse endo fxn
Factors that cause abnormal endothelial response
High cholesterol HTN Diabetes Age Smoking
Pathogenesis of plaque formation
- Risk factor for endo fxn
- LDL into the intima
- LDL oxidized - increases cytokine production
- Increased VCAM 1 = adhesion molecules
- Monocytes bind and enter endothelium –> macrophages –> phagocytose oxidized LDL –> = FOAM CELLS
Define foam cell
Macrophage in intimia that has phagocytosed oxidized LDL
How do you go from foam cell –> fatty streak
Foam cell - attract smooth muscle cells from media
SM proliferates & secretes ECM proteins
Foam cells die - increasing ECM and lipid deposits
Net: calcification and capillary in-growth
3 things in the necrotic core of plaques
- Degenerating foam cells
- ECM
- Cholesterol crystals
Components of fibrous cap
Connective tissue w/ SM
Which areas of arteries are higher risk for clot formation?
Branch pts b/c low shear stress here