Top Banner
ATHEROSCLEROSIS Dr Subhasish Deb Dept of General Medicine Burdwan Medical College
45

Atherosclerosis

Jan 26, 2017

Download

Healthcare

Subhasish Deb
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Atherosclerosis

ATHEROSCLEROSISDr Subhasish DebDept of General MedicineBurdwan Medical College

Page 2: Atherosclerosis

ATHEROSCLEROSISA condition characterized by :

Hardening of arteries with loss of elasticity Characterized by intimal lesions called

atheroma that protrude into the vessel lumen

Page 3: Atherosclerosis

ARTERIOSCLEROSIS Hardening of arteries with loss of

elasticity 3 types:

1. Monckeberg medial calcific sclerosis2. Atherosclerosis3. Arteriolosclerosis

Page 4: Atherosclerosis

MONCKEBERG MEDIAL CALCIFIC SCLEROSIS

Most benign Medium sized arteries – radial, ulnar Calcification in MEDIA, usually age

related, 60-70yrs Calcification does not encroach into

intima, hence no dangerous complications

Usually involves U/L arteries

Page 5: Atherosclerosis
Page 6: Atherosclerosis

ATHEROSCLEROSIS No 1 killer in western world Disease of INTIMA Formation of fibro fatty plaques Involves:

Elastic arteries - aorta, carotid, iliac Medium sized muscular arteries –

coronary, popliteal, circle of willis In smaller vessles they cause occlusion

and in larger ones medial weakening - aneurysms

Page 7: Atherosclerosis
Page 8: Atherosclerosis

ARTERIOLOSCLEROSIS1. Hyaline arteriolosclerosis

Deposition of amorphous hyaline in media Seen in – senile changes, Essential HTN,

DM2. Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis

Arterioles become narrow Media has concentric layers of smooth

muscle hypertrophy – onion skin Seen in Malignant hypertension

Page 9: Atherosclerosis
Page 10: Atherosclerosis

Hyaline arteriolosclerosis

Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis

Page 11: Atherosclerosis

PATHOGENESIS OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS Hypothesis:

1. Intimal cellular proliferation2. Repetitive formation and organization of

thrombi3. Response - to – injury

A process of chronic inflammation in response to a chronic or acute injury

Key players:1. Modified lipoproteins2. Monocyte derived macrophage3. T lymphocytes4. Smooth muscles from media

Page 12: Atherosclerosis

Atherogenesis: developmental process of atheromatous plaque

Characterized by remodeling of arteries leading to sub endothelial accumulation of fatty substances called plaques

A slow process, developed over many years, 1st lesion being fatty dots

Page 13: Atherosclerosis

I. ENDOTHELIAL INJURY It leads to:

Increased vascular permeability Leukocyte adhesion Thrombus formation

What causes injury??a) Haemodynamic stress: plaques tend to

occur in areas of disturbed blood flow1. Branch points2. Ostia of vessels3. Post wall of abd aorta

Page 14: Atherosclerosis

Laminar flow of blood is protective.

It suppresses expression of leukocyte adhesion molecules

Augments production of NO by endothelial cells which not only cause vasodilatation but also acts as local anti-inflmmatory autacoid - limiting adhesion molecule expression

Laminar flow stimulates production of superoxide dismutase from endothelial cells – anti oxidant

Page 15: Atherosclerosis
Page 16: Atherosclerosis

b) Lipid Abnormalities Inc LDL Inc lipoprotein a Dec HDL

How these lipid abnormalities are bad? Inc LDL means more cholesterol goes

to peripheries They damage endothelial cells

1. Make them more permeable – more lips go inside

2. NO released from endothelial cells do not allow platelets to stick. But excess lipids – formation of free radicals which neutralize NO – platelets can now stick and release their products

Page 17: Atherosclerosis

3. LDL in intima gets oxidized and plays role in atheroma formation

Other risk factors causing endothelial injury:c) Smokingd) Toxins e) Microbes – CMV, chlamydia

Pneumoniaef) Homocystineg) Inflammatory cytokines

Page 18: Atherosclerosis

INITIATION OF LESION: Initial lesions are fatty dots and streaks Accumulation of lipoprotein particles

may not result form increased permeability or ‘leakiness’

Lipoprotein may accumulate as they bind to some GAG in the extracellular matrix

Page 19: Atherosclerosis

II. ACCUMULATION OF LIPOPROTEINS IN VESSEL WALL

Usually ldl It gets oxidized

Page 20: Atherosclerosis

III. MONOCYTE ADHESION TO ENDOTHELIUM

Healthy endothelium does not express adhesion molecules for WBC

VCAM-1 (vascular endothelial cell adhesion molecule expressed in response to injury

Monocytes convert to macrophages and bind to these VCAM-1 and enter the sub endothelial space

Page 21: Atherosclerosis

They release cytokines that stimulates lymphocytes. These lymphocytes also produce chemical mediators that stimulate macrophages.

Macrophages release:1. IL 12. TNF 3. MCP 1 (monocyte chemotactic protein 1)

Lymphocytes release:1. Gamma IF

Page 22: Atherosclerosis
Page 23: Atherosclerosis

IV. SMOOTH MUSCLE CELL PROLIFERATION AND EXTRA CELLULAR MATRIX PRODUCTION The next major player coming rushing

to the site is Smooth Muscle cells from the MEDIA

Due to the environment with theses chemicals, the SMCs change their behavior. Their contractile protein dissolves and they behave primitively – only proliferation.

SMC also release ECM and collagen

Page 24: Atherosclerosis

FOAM CELLS Derived from macrophages and smooth

muscle cells that have taken up a lot of cholesterol

Macrophages release ros that oxidises LDL

Oxidized LDL is more delicious so taken up more my macrophages and SMC – foam cells

Page 25: Atherosclerosis
Page 26: Atherosclerosis

Some of the foam cells overladen with lipid will burst and become necrotic. Their contents leak out, so a lipid core is formed.

The SMCs which are multiplying are present both above and below this lipid core encircling it

SMCs near the endothelial surface multiply more due the proximity to Growth Factors. They secrete GAG and collagen extracellularly –FIBRIN CAP

Page 27: Atherosclerosis

Fibrin cap is composed of: Smooth muscle cells Collagen, GAG Some lymphocytes Some macrophages

Page 28: Atherosclerosis
Page 29: Atherosclerosis
Page 30: Atherosclerosis
Page 31: Atherosclerosis

Below the fibrous cap lies the core Growth factors go to the shoulder of

the lesion and stimulate vasa vasorum. So new vessels grow in from the sides. (play imp role in plaque Hg)

Page 32: Atherosclerosis
Page 33: Atherosclerosis

RISK FACTORS FOR ATHEROSCLEROSIS Fixed risk factors:

1. Age2. Sex: M>>F (women protected until

menopause – estrogen)3. Genetics : htn, dm, hypercholesterlemia

have a genetic component

Page 34: Atherosclerosis

Modifiable risk factors:1. Hyperlipidemia:

Omega 3 fatty acid in fish oil is good Baked products with PUFA bad

2. Hypertension : responsible for both initiation and progression

3. Tobacco smoking4. DM5. Homocystinuria : some people develop

this due to folate & B6 def6. Chronic inflammation7. Obesity8. Type A personality

Page 35: Atherosclerosis

AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION CLASSIFICATION OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS 1. Type 1/ initial lesion/ fatty dots:

1mm yellow dots Starts appearing in early life, even at 1yr

in aorta Almost all children have such lesion by

10yrs Contain just few scattered macrophages

Page 36: Atherosclerosis
Page 37: Atherosclerosis

2. Type 2 lesions/ fatty streaks: Linear kesons formed by fusion of dots Upto 1cm Develops at early age ~10yrs They are precursors of mature plaques But their location are not similar to

location of plaques (thus every fatty streak is not going to grow into a plaque)

Consists of more macrophages, more foam cells and some T cells

Page 38: Atherosclerosis
Page 39: Atherosclerosis

3. Type 3 lesion/ intermediate lesions:

Lipids are present not only in macrophages but also extracellularly. Hence different from II.

4. Type 4/ atheromatous plaque: Presence of core of lipid surrounded by

foam cells

5. Type 5/ fibroatheromatous lesion: Neovascularization at shoulder Fibrin cap Central core of lipid + necrotic debri

Page 40: Atherosclerosis

6. Type 6/ complicated lesions/ complicated atheroma:

Surface defect in endothelium Presence of platelet plug and fibrin on the

lumen side = thrombus There may by Hg. Blood comes from

ruptured vessels in plaque. Intra plaque hg enlarges and blocks lumen of vessel

Growth of lesions 1-4 manily depends on acculumation of lipid in lesion

Growth of 5 due to accumulation of SMC and collagen

Growth of 6 by blood or thrombus

Page 41: Atherosclerosis
Page 42: Atherosclerosis

MOST COMMON SITES OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS

1. Abdominal aorta (infra renal)2. Coronary art3. Popliteal art4. Carotid art5. Circle of willis

(in this order)

Page 43: Atherosclerosis

COMPLICATIONS1. Fibrosis2. Calcification3. Erosions 4. Ulcerations 5. Rupture6. Platelet plug formation7. Thrombus formation8. Atheroembolism9. Intra plaque haemorrhage

Page 44: Atherosclerosis

1. Erosion and ulcerations: When endothelium is removed and

underlying basement membrane of intima exposed.

This BM is highly thrombogenic and will attract platelets.

2. Fissuring and rupture: Damage goes deeper and exposes the

lipid. (ie both endothelium and BM lost) When very narrow called fissure, when

wide = rupture 2

1endothelium

Basement membrane

Page 45: Atherosclerosis

THANK YOU