Pathology of Atherosclerosis Flashcards
What are the nonmodifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis?
Increasing age
Male gender (estrogen is protective)
Genetic predisposition
What are the major modifiable risk factors for atherosclerosis?
Hyperlipidemia, smoking, hypertension, diabetes
What are the four biochemical labs which, when elevated, are associated with atherosclerosis?
- C-reactive protein (inflammation
- Homocysteine
- Lipoprotein (a)
- Plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) -> released by endothelial cells in prothrombotic states
What is the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis?
- Arterial endothelial injury
- Increased vascular permeability, endothelial activation, adhesion of platelets, monocytes, lymphocytes
- Influx of cholesterol, monocytes, and T lymphocytes into intma
- Release of chemotaxic agents via endothelium, platelets, macrophages
- Oxidation of accumulated LDL
- Migration of smooth muscles from media to intima
- Intimal SMC prolferation and production of ECM
- Organization of thrombotic material, mediated by growth factors from endothelium, platelets, and MACs
- Enlargement and progression of plaque
What hemodynamic stresses predispose to endothelial injury?
Turbulent blood flow -> occurs preferentially at brain points, allowing endothelial exposure to injurious products and formed blood elements which damage endothelium
What are chemical and physical agents which can damage the endothelium?
- Extra cholesterol particles
- Toxins from cigarette smoke
- Hyperglycemia (why diabetes predisposes)
- Chronic inflammation -> direct infection is associated
- Homocysteine levels (perpetuated by low B9/B12 levels)
How do activated endothelial cells contribute to the atherosclerotic process?
Increased vascular permeability lets more cells / particles in, increased expression of leukocyte adhesion molecules (i.e. ICAM / VCAM), platelet adherence increased, production of growth factors
How do macrophages amplify the atherosclerosis response?
Increase IL-1/TNF levels to increase leukocyte adhesion, give chemotactic cytokines, and oxidize LDL via oxygen-free radicals. They also secrete growth factors.
What are intracellular / extracellular cholesterol inclusions called in atherosclerosis?
Intracellular - foam cells -> inside SMCs and macrophages (via scavenger receptor)
Extracellular - cholesterol clefts, in the fatty, necrotic core
How do platelets contribute to pathogenesis of atherosclerosis?
Adhere to activated endothelium producing growth factors (SMC proliferation) and form thrombus / organization of atherosclerotic plaques
How do vascular smooth muscle cells contribute to pathogenesis of atherosclerosis?
Synthesize growth factors, migrate into intima and proliferate, deposit ECM, and ingest oxidized LDL to become foam cells
What is the gross and microscopic appearance of a fatty streak? Is it atherosclerosis?
Gross - narrow, flat, yellow, linear streak
Microscopic - Small aggregation of lipid-filled macrophages (foam cells) in the intima
Not considered an atheromatous plaque (need to be an atheroma) -> may be the precursor
What is an atheroma? How does it appear grossly?
Uncomplicated fibrofatty plaque (within the intima)
Grossly - raised, yellow-white lesion protruding into blood vessel
What are the three components of the atheroma?
- Fibrous cap - immediately under endothelium, predominantly ECM made of collagen and scattered smooth muscle cells
- Lipid core - underneath the cap, a mixture of clefts, foam cells, plasma proteins, and necrotic cell debris
- Mononuclear inflammatory cells (T cells and macrophages) with proliferating capillaries - appear around the periphery and surrounding the lipid core
Why does calcification occur as a plaque complication?
There is increased cell permeability with necrosis
-> allows calcium influx and dystrophic calcification