pathophysiology of atheroma Flashcards
what is atheroma/ATHEROSCLEROSIS
Formation of focal elevated lesions (plaques) in intima of large and medium-sized arteries
what causes ischaemia?
atheromatous plaques narrow lumen
what are the serious consequences of atheroma?
angina due to myocardial ischaemia
what are characteristics of early atheromatous plaque?
Young adults onwards
Smooth yellow patches in intima
Lipid-laden macrophages
Progress to established plaques
what are characteristics of fully developed arethromatous plaque?
Central lipid core with fibrous tissue cap, covered by arterial endothelium
Collagens (produced by smooth muscle cells) in cap provide structural strength
Inflammatory cells (macrophages, T-lymphocytes, mast cells) reside in fibrous cap: recruited from arterial endothelium
Central lipid core rich in cellular lipids/debris derived from macrophages (died in plaque)
Soft, highly thrombogenic, often rim of “foamy” macrophages (“foamy” due to uptake of oxidised lipoproteins via specialised membrane bound scavenger receptor)
what complicated atheroma?
Features of established atheromatous plaque (lipid-rich core, fibrous cap) plus
Haemorrhage into plaque (calcification)
Plaque rupture/fissuring
Thrombosis
whats the aetiology of arethroma?
Hypercholesterolaemia most important risk factor
Importance of LDL cholesterol
1/500 Caucasians heterozygous for this type mutation: ↓ functional receptors on cell surfaces, elevated plasma LDL cholesterol levels
Rare patients homozygous (1/million): much higher cholesterol levels, usually die from coronary artery atheroma in infancy/teens
what are signs of major hyperlipidaemia?
Biochemical evidence: LDL, HDL, total cholesterol, triglycerides
Corneal arcus (premature) Tendon xanthomata (knuckles, Achilles) Xanthelasmata
what are risk factors for atheroma?
Smoking Hypertension Diabetes mellitus Male Elderly Accelerate process of plaque formation driven by lipids
what are less strong risk factors of atheroma?
Obesity Sedentary lifestyle Low socio-economic status Low birthweight ?role of micro-organisms
what is the 2 step process of atheromatous plaques
Injury to endothelial lining of artery
Chronic inflammatory and healing response of vascular wall to agent causing injury
what is the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis?
Endothelial injury and dysfunction
Accumulation of lipoproteins (LDL) in vessel wall
Monocyte adhesion to endothelium → migration into intima and transformation to foamy macrophages
Platelet adhesion
Factor release from activated platelets, macrophages → smooth muscle cell recruitment
Smooth muscle cell proliferation, extracellular matrix production and T-cell recruitment
Lipid accumulation (extracellular and in foamy macrophages)
what are consequences of atheroma?
Progressive lumen narrowing due to high grade plaque stenosis
acute atherothrombotic occlusion
Embolisation of the distal arterial bed
Ruptured atheromatous abdominal aortic aneurysm
what is Progressive lumen narrowing due to high grade plaque stenosis
Stenosis of > 50-75% of vessel lumen → critical reduction of blood flow in distal arterial bed → reversible tissue ischaemia
what is acute atherothrombotic occlusion
Major complications: rupture of plaque → acute event
Rupture exposes highly thrombogenic plaque contents (collagen, lipid, debris) to blood stream → activation of coagulation cascade and thrombotic occlusion in very short time
Total occlusion → irreversible ischaemia → necrosis (infarction) of tissues