Endothelial Dysfunction — role?
Initiates atherogenesis by increasing permeability.
Atherosclerosis — definition?
Progressive buildup of LDL in arteries.
LDL oxidation — process?
LDL crosses endothelium and oxidizes beneath it.
Affected arteries?
Coronary, carotid, peripheral arteries.
Fatty streak — composition?
Accumulation of foam cells from monocytes.
Plaque stability — stable?
Collagen-rich, fibrous cap.
Monocyte transformation — role?
Monocytes become foam cells in fatty streaks.
Critical stenosis threshold?
Occlusion >70-75%.
Fibrous plaque — features?
VSMC migration, collagen synthesis, extracellular lipid.
Endothelium — role?
Initiates atherogenesis when dysfunctional.
Collagen production — source?
Vascular smooth muscle cells.
Foam cells — origin?
Lipid-laden macrophages from monocytes.
Advanced plaque — contents?
Lipid core, necrotic debris, collagen, smooth muscle.
Unstable plaque — feature?
Thin fibrous cap, large lipid core.
Lipid core — location?
Central necrotic area of advanced plaque.
Plaque rupture — trigger?
Thin fibrous cap overlying lipid core fissures.
Thrombosis — result of?
Plaque rupture exposing thrombogenic material.
Hypercholesterolemia — LDL level?
Greater than 160 mg/dl.
Risk factors — examples?
Hypertension, smoking, diabetes, obesity.
Plaque stability — determinants?
Collagen content and lipid core size.
Stable plaque — features?
Collagen-rich, hard, low rupture tendency.
Unstable plaque — features?
Lipid-rich, soft, high rupture risk.
Critical stenosis — percentage?
Over 70-75% narrowing.
Symptoms — when occur?
When stenosis exceeds critical threshold.
Chronic ischemia — cause?
Partially narrowed arteries, stable plaques.
Acute ischemia — cause?
Vessel occlusion after plaque rupture.
Affected arteries — common sites?
Coronary, carotid, peripheral arteries.
Progression — early age?
Lesions can develop from ages 10-20.
Plaque stability — importance?
Affects rupture risk and clinical events.
Clinical manifestation — asymptomatic?
Until significant stenosis causes symptoms.
Bystander event — in coronary artery?
Myocardial infarction or unstable angina.
Brain ischemia — presenting?
TIA or cerebral infarction.
Limb ischemia — signs?
Intermittent claudication, gangrene.
Lesion development — stages?
Endothelial dysfunction, fatty streak, fibrous, complicated.
Atherogenesis — initiators?
Endothelial injury and LDL oxidation.
Plaque rupture consequence?
Thrombosis and potential vessel occlusion.
Chronic vs acute — classification?
Based on stability and occlusion severity.
Тествайте знанията си с 21 въпроса по Understanding Atherosclerosis Development.
1. Which process primarily initiates endothelial dysfunction that leads to LDL oxidation in atherosclerosis?
2. What is the primary component that initiates atherogenesis when dysfunctional?
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