Pathology: Atherosclerosis and Lipid Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What inflammation-associated molecule is useful for measuring risk for Atherosclerosis and other conditions such as MI and stroke.

A
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2
Q

This is an image of an Aorta. What is being shown at the arrows?

A

(A) Aorta with fatty streaks (arrows), mainly near the ostia of branch vessels.

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3
Q

Atherosclerotic Plaque

  • What are the key features of this?
  • How big are they?
  • What color are they, and what could be the reason why they have color changes?
  • What do some vessels have an increased incidence of having Atherosclerotic Plaques compared to others?
A
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4
Q

What occurs when a rupture, ulceration, or erosion of the surface of atheromatous plaques?

A
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5
Q
A

A

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6
Q

What does this image show?

A
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7
Q

What are the constitutional risk factors for Atherosclerosis?

A
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8
Q

How does this plaque relate to the thinning of the vessel wall? What part of the vessel is most thinned, and how does this relate to the location of the plaque?

A
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9
Q
A

D

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10
Q

Describe the historical characteristics of Atherosclerotic plaques

A
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11
Q
  • Give the order of descending severity for atherosclerosis in the following structures
    • Popliteal Arteries
    • Vessells of the Circle of Willis
    • Coronary Arteries
    • Abdominal Aorta
    • Internal Carotid Arteries
A
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12
Q

Describe the process in which inflammation contributes to the initiation, progression, and complications of atherosclerotic lesions.

A
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13
Q

Intimal lesions

  • How do these lesions weaken the tunica media?
  • What is a major/deadly outcome of this weakness?
A

Ischemic tunica media + ECM changes by inflammation can lead to aneurysm

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14
Q

What are the three concentric layers of the walls of large vessels?

A
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15
Q
  • What kind of vessels are most affected by Atherosclerosis?
  • What are the general symptoms related to Atherosclerosis?
  • What are the major pathological outcomes of Atherosclerosis?
A
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16
Q

Why is atherosclerosis-related mortality typically reflective deaths by ischemic heart disease?

A
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17
Q

What are the modifiable risk factors for Atherosclerosis?

A
18
Q
  • Concerning genetics
    • What is the most independent risk factor for Atherosclerosis?
    • What are some other genetic RFs?
A
19
Q

Concerning gender, what group of people seem to be protected against Atherosclerosis?

A
20
Q

What is shown in this vessel wall?

A
  • A Fatty streak, demonstrating intimal, macrophage-derived foam cells (arrows).
21
Q

What is the difference in vulnerable plaques and stable plaques?

A
22
Q

Describe the general morphology of an Atherosclerotic plaque, keeping in mind the 3 basic components of Atherosclerotic Plaques.

A
23
Q
A

A

24
Q

What happens to atheromas over time?

A
25
Q

What is the general process that causes the migration of SMCs into the tunica intima?

A
26
Q

Atherosclerosis

  • What is an atheroma?
  • What conditions can Atherosclerosis be the outcome of?
  • Why is this disease so significant to the world?
A
27
Q

Describe how age relates to when Atherosclerosis and why MI’s increase in prevalence as PTs get older

A
28
Q

What does this show?

A

Plaque rupture with superimposed thrombus

29
Q

What is shown at each of the two arrows?

A
  • Aorta with severe diffuse complicated lesions, including an ulcerated plaque (open arrow), and a lesion with overlying thrombus (closed arrow).
30
Q

Atheromatous plaques

  • What is at the core of these plaques, and what are the covered by?
  • How does stenosis, thrombosis, and occlusion relate to these plaques?
A
31
Q

This is Atherosclerotic plaque in a coronary artery. What does each letter stand for?

A
32
Q

What is the critical function for vascular response to injury?

A
33
Q
  • What are the main cells that contribute to thrombosis, atherosclerosis, and hypertensive vascular lesions?
  • What are the main cells that contribute to luminal occlusion?
A
34
Q

What is shown in this Aorta at the arrow?

A

Aorta with mild atherosclerosis composed of fibrous plaques, one denoted by the arrow.

35
Q
  • Describe how hyperlipidemia relates to Atherosclerosis
    • What is the main lipid-carrier associated with increased risk for Atherosclerosis?
    • What does each of those lipid-carrier do?
A
36
Q

What does this show?

A

Acute coronary thrombosis superimposed on an atherosclerotic plaque with focal disruption of the fibrous cap, triggering fatal myocardial infarction

37
Q

Describe the multiplicative effects of RFs for Atherosclerosis

A
38
Q
  • The response-to-injury hypothesis views atherosclerosis as a chronic inflammatory response of the arterial wall to endothelial injury. According to this model, atherosclerosis results from what process? (Describe the EC injury causes, the role of lipoproteins, platelets, monocytes, SMCs, and macrophages)
A
39
Q

What is a fatty streak?

A
40
Q

What are the “random” risk factors for Atherosclerosis?

A
41
Q
  • What will eventually happen to an expanding atheroma?
  • How is the above outcome represented in patient activity?
  • Describe how chronic arterial hypoperfusion is related to Atherosclerosis.
  • What can Acute Plaque Change (plaque erosion or rupture) trigger?
A
42
Q

What are the three principal components of Atherosclerotic plaques?

A