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Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow:...

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Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease
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Page 1: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease

Page 2: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Blood supply to the heart

Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand

Arteries & veins are located on the surface of the heart, lying within groves called sulci

Blood flows through coronaries during the RELAXATION phase (diastole) Why?

Page 3: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Primary Superficial ArteriesRight CoronaryRight Marginal

BranchLeft CoronaryLeft Anterior

DescendingLeft Circumflex

Page 4: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.
Page 5: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Areas of Coronary Artery Perfusion:LAD:LAD: Majority of the left

ventricle: Anterior/InferiorCircumflex (Cx):Circumflex (Cx): Inferior and

Posterior LVRCA: RCA: RV, Posterior and Septal

Page 6: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

LCA

Circumflex

LAD

Page 7: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Right Marginal Branch

Page 8: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Rt. Marginal

RCA

Page 9: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Pathogenesis of Atherosclerosis

Page 10: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Step 1: Endothelial Injury

Location? coronaries, carotids, renal arteries, lower extremities

Tunica Intima damaged (How?)LDL Oxidation: Initiates

Inflammatory Process:Monocytes: Attracted and “glued”

to endothelium by “ELAMS” (endothelial-leukocyte adhesion molecules)

Page 11: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

STEP 2: Inflammation gone HaywireMonocytes/Leukocytes enter the

Sub-endothelial space

Initiate Smooth Muscle Cell proliferation

Attract more LDL to create a “fatty streak”

Page 12: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Blood Clot

Normal Narrowed Occluded

Ouch!

Page 13: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

LDL’s and AtherosclerosisLDL’s and Atherosclerosis

Oxidized LDLs act as a “free radical”, which induces endothelial injury inflammation begins

Some LDLs are removed by macrophages, but high LDLs will cause much injury

LDLs = accelerated atherosclerosis

Page 14: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

SmoothMuscle

Vessel Lumen

Page 15: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Myocardial Oxygen SupplyMyocardial Oxygen Supply

Cardiac cells extract most of the oxygen delivered (high A-vO2 diff)

Thus additional oxygen can only be met by delivering more blood by the coronary arteries

A reduction in coronary artery lumen size attenuates blood flow

Page 16: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Degree of Occlusion & Degree of Occlusion & Blood FlowBlood Flow

25 50 75 100%

BloodFlow

Page 17: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Blood FlowBlood Flow

Big reduction beyond 75% occlusion

Severity of disease depends on # of occluded arteries

Also location of occlusion (left coronary vs apical)

Page 18: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Myocardial O2 demand Myocardial O2 demand (MVO(MVO22) depends on..) depends on.. Myocardial tension

(pressure x volume)Inotropic State (Measure?)Chronotropic state

(Measure?)Myocardial mass

Page 19: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Indirect measure of MVOIndirect measure of MVO22

Rate pressure product (a.k.a. double product, tension-time index)

Considers 2 of the MVO2 indices:HR X SBP

Good estimate of oxygen use by the heart.

Used to determine angina threshold

Page 20: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

End Results of End Results of AtherosclerosisAtherosclerosis

Unstable Angina

Stable Angina

Acute Myocardial Infarction

Sudden Cardiac Death

Page 21: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Stable Angina

Angina occurs at a consistent and predictable level of MVO2

Reduced Coronary Blood FlowAlways exercise at an intensity

below the angina thresholdHow would you identify the angina

threshold?

Page 22: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Anginal SymptomsVaried: Chest pressure/heavinessBack, neck, shoulder acheDiaphoresisPallorDyspneaDoes it occur upon exertion?

Page 23: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Unstable Angina

Due in part to intra-coronary spasmThis reduces lumen diameterMay occur ANY time (unpredictable)

and at any work intensityTermed “Vasospastic” or

“Prinzmetal’s Angina”

Page 24: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Acute Myocardial InfarctionAcute Myocardial Infarction

Intra-lumenal thrombus formation

Thrombus lodges in coronary artery, stops blood flow

Cells downstream are starved of O2

Leads to tissue necrosis

Page 25: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

LAD: Thrombosis

Area of Infarct

Page 26: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Sudden DeathSudden Death

May be due to the death of heart tissue from large vessel occlusion

or.. emboli (ischemia) induce ventricular arrhythmias that will kill

(i.e. ventricular fibrillation)

Page 27: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Infarction symptomsInfarction symptoms

Similar to angina: diaphoretic, pallor complexion, pain

Vomiting, dyspneaSymptoms are often ignored or

denied by the patientOdds of survival are greatest if they

get help within 1 hour

Page 28: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Complications of MIComplications of MICardiac Tamponade: Fluid

between pericardium/myocardiumPericarditis: Inflammation of the

pericardiumEmboli: From either MI thrombus

or atrial clots formed with atrial pooling

Page 29: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Most Common Most Common Complications:Complications:Congestive Heart Failure:

75% of MI’s experience overt CHF Fluid backs up…

25% of MI’s experience “compensated” CHF reduced perfusion to “vital organs”?

Dysrhythmias: The importance of ECG monitoring post-MI

Page 30: Pathophysiology of Coronary Artery Disease. Blood supply to the heart n Coronary Blood Flow: Constant Demand n Arteries & veins are located on the surface.

Assignment:Assignment:

Read: “Cardiovascular disease and the endothelium”

Answer: How does understanding the mechanism of the disease (pathophysiology) improve prevention, detection and intervention strategies?


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