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Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

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Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis
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Page 1: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

AtherosclerosisCVS lecture 2

Atherosclerosis

Page 2: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Vessel wall structure

Page 3: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Atherosclerosis• Atherosclerosis is a specific type of arteriosclerosis

(thickening & hardening of arterial walls) affecting primarily the intima of large and medium-sized muscular arteries.

• Chronic inflammatory response in the walls of arteries.

• Slowly progressive.• A build-up of fat (cholesterol) within the artery wall.• Characterized by intimal lesions called: atheromas,

atheromatous or fibrofatty plaques

Page 4: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

AtherosclerosisCommon sites

• Abdominal aorta• Coronaries• Popliteal artery• The internal carotid arteries• The vessels of the circle of Willis

Page 5: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Atherosclerosis Risk factors

Page 6: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

LDL Vs. HDL

• LDL cholesterol : deliver cholesterol to peripheral tissues.

• HDL, "good cholesterol“: mobilizes cholesterol from developing and existing atheromas and transports it to the liver for excretion in the bile

Page 7: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Pathogenesis of Atherosclerosis•Cause? - Current hypothesis: Response to Injury - Initiated by endothelial dysfunction•–The main component of fibro-fatty plaque are:

– Lipid containing macrophages– Extracellular matrix– Cells, Proliferating smooth muscle cells

Page 8: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Atherosclerosis Pathogenesis

Response-to-injury hypothesis• Endothelial injuryEndothelial injury

– Not completely understood– Nevertheless, the two most important causes of

endothelial dysfunction are:1. Hemodynamic disturbances (HTN)2. Hypercholesterolemia

– Inflammation is also an important contributor.

Page 9: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Response to injury hypothesis Injury to the endothelium

(dysfunctional endothelium)

Chronic inflammatory response

Migration of SMC from media to intima

Proliferation of Smooth Ms Cells in intima

Excess production of Extra cellular Matrix

Enhanced lipid accumulation

Page 10: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Evolution of arterial wall Evolution of arterial wall changes in the response changes in the response to injury hypothesis. to injury hypothesis. Normal.

Endothelial injury with adhesion of monocytes and platelets (the latter to sites where endothelium has been lost).

Migration of monocytes and smooth muscle cells into the intima.

Page 11: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Smooth muscle cell proliferation in the intima with ECM production.

Well-developed plaque

Page 12: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.
Page 13: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Fatty streak, a collection of foamy macrophages in the intima. A, Aorta with fatty streaks (arrows), associated largely with the ostia of branch vessels. B, Intimal, macrophage-derived foam cells

Page 14: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Plaques vary from

0.3 to 1.5 cm in diameter, but can coalesce to form larger masses

Page 15: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

AtherosclerosisConsequences

Page 16: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Atherosclerosis Clinical Complications

• Myocardial infarction (heart attack)• Cerebral infarction (stroke)• Aortic aneurysms• Mesentric occlusion • Peripheral vascular disease (gangrene of the

legs)

Page 17: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

Morphological changes that are seen on macro and microscopic levels in

atherosclerosis• Neovascularization (formation of new blood vessels)• Calcification• Hemorrhage• Fissure• Ulcer• Thrombosis• Medial thinning• Cholesterol microemboli• Aneurysmal dilatation

Page 18: Atherosclerosis CVS lecture 2 Atherosclerosis. Vessel wall structure.

•Neovascularisation•Calcification•Inflam. cells

Elastin membranedestroyed

Fibrous capCholesterol clefts


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