Pathophysiology of ASCVD Flashcards

1
Q

What is ASCVD ins layman’s terms

A

Clogged arteries

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2
Q

What are the modifiable ASCVD risk factors

A

Hypertension, Dyslipidemia, Diabetes, Smoking

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3
Q

What are the non-modifiable ASCVD risk factors

A

Male gender, Age, genetics (family history)

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4
Q

How does atherosclerosis start

A

LDL particles enter intima layer due to endothelial breakdown

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5
Q

What happens once the LDL particles enter the intima layer

A

LDL particles become oxidized, this oxidation leads to activation of plasminogen activator inhibitor promoting coagulation inside the blood vessel

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6
Q

Why is there increased vasoconstriction when LDL particles enter the intima

A

Oxidized LDL particles increase endothelin ( a potent vasoconstrictor) while leading to less nitric oxide

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7
Q

T/F: When oxidized LDL enter the intima they can cause inflammation that attracts monocyte

A

True

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8
Q

What do monocytes become when they engulf oxidized LDL in the intima of a blood vessel

A

Foam cells

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9
Q

How does the plaque become more developed and form inward

A

Accumulation of Foam cells, T cells, and inflammation mediators/ smooth muscles cells move to intima adding bulk

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10
Q

What are the two ways that a growing plaque loses its fibourous cap

A

Decrease in collagen production and increasing collagen degradation

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11
Q

How do foam cells lead to hypercoagulation

A

Increase the production of tissue factor

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12
Q

What causes a necrotic core in a plaque

A

Foam cells degrade and die and they are not able be cleared from the area due to diminished blood vessels functions

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13
Q

What can occur if there is plaque rupture that cause a break in the blood vessel, what can occur if this is out of control

A

thrombosis, thrombous formation becomes greater than endogenous fibrinolysis leading to arterial occlusion

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14
Q

What can occur if there is a plaque rupture and thrombosis occurs but endogenous fibrinolysis keeps up with the thrombosis

A

More fibrous eccentric occlusive plaque that will also lead to a narrow lumen

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15
Q

What endothelial dysfunction of ASCVD can occur from the first decade of life

A

Fatty streak formation

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16
Q

What endothelial dysfunction of ASCVD can occur from the third decade of life

A

Intermediate lesion and athreoma

17
Q

What endothelial dysfunction of ASCVD can occur from the fourth decade of life

A

Fibroatheroma and Complicated lesion

18
Q

What ASCVD diseases can occur due to these lipid complications

A

Intracranial atherosclerosis, flow reducing carotid stenosis, cardiogenic emboli, carotid plaque with atriogenic emboli, artery spasm

19
Q

What are the two most vital organs that can be affect by ASCVD, what diseases are associated with these organs

A

Brain (cerebrovascular disease), Heart (coronary heart disease and coronary artery disease)

20
Q

T/F: If there is a decrease in luminal area there is a decrease in peripheral resistance

A

False: A small decrease in luminal area leads to a large change in peripheral resistance and pressure gradient across stenosis

21
Q

What determines oxygen supply

A

Arterial pO2 (oxygenation and hemoglobin stores), Diastolic filling time (heart rate), coronary blood flow

22
Q

What determines oxygen demand

A

heart rate, Myocardial contractility, ventricular wall tension

23
Q

T/F: Large blood vessels are more likely to cause coronary resistance

A

False: Small blood vessels are the major determinant of coronary resistance

24
Q

How can coronary resistance of small vessels lead to ischemia

A

Maximal dilation at rest lead to less perfusion pressure when it is need most, such as exercising

25
Q

What happens to the brain when it is no longer able to regulate the increase in blood flow

A

Forced dilation leads to an increase in pressure and increased risk for vasogenic edema

26
Q

What are the cascade of consequences that can happen due to decreasing cerebral perfusion pressure after extended periods of increased pressure

A

increased vasodilation –> increase cerebral blood volume–> increased intracranial pressure

27
Q

What is collateral circulation

A

Maturation of smaller, capillary like vessels from preexisting arteries providing flow to areas of ischemia

28
Q

What growth factors lead to the collateral circulation vessels

A

VEGF and BFGF

29
Q

What is infarction

A

Death of tissue due to little blood supply

30
Q

What is ischemic penumbra

A

Tissue that surrounds an infarction but is metabolically active and vulnerable to an infarction

31
Q

What is a consequence caused by the tissue in a ischemic penumbra

A

Metabolic toxins and oxygen free radicals accumulate causing an ionic shift

32
Q

What major events are more likely to occur in the brain and heart due to depolarization due to the ionic shift (pneumbra growth)

A

Seizures and/or arrhythymias

33
Q

What is the equation that determines Cerebral Perfusion Pressure, what is the main determinant from the equation

A

CPP= MAP-ICP, mean arterial pressure

34
Q

T/F: Too little CPP can lead to ischemia while too much CPP can lead to edema

A

True

35
Q

What is the percent of coronary stenosis (occlusion) where there are generally no symptoms, when would symptoms start to occur and why

A

less than 40%, 40%-50% due NO depletion

36
Q

At what percentage of coronary stenosis does non obstructive coronary artery disease become obstructive

A

70%, symptoms are more likely to become present

37
Q

T/F: At 80% to 85% plaques are most likely to rupture

A

False: At 40% to 70% plaques are most prone to rupturing, at 80% to 85% symptoms occur at rest