Ficha de revisão: Understanding Atherosclerosis and Its Clinical Impact

Unit 13: Atherosclerosis – Exam Revision Sheet

1. 📌 Essentials

  • Atherosclerosis is a chronic arterial disease characterized by lipid-rich plaques in medium/large arteries.
  • The primary lipid involved is LDL cholesterol, which infiltrates and oxidizes in the wall.
  • It initiates with endothelial dysfunction from risk factors like hypertension, smoking, and hypercholesterolemia.
  • Fatty streaks are early, asymptomatic lesions consisting of foam cells and lipid accumulation.
  • Fibrous plaques feature smooth muscle proliferation, collagen, and a lipid core, with potential for stability or rupture.
  • Plaque rupture exposes thrombogenic material, leading to thrombus formation and possible vessel occlusion.
  • Clinical signs appear when arterial lumen decreases by >70-75%, causing ischemia.
  • Major affected arteries include coronary, carotid, iliac, and femoral arteries.
  • Risk factors include hyperlipidemia, hypertension, smoking, diabetes, obesity, and inactivity.
  • Advanced plaques can cause chronic ischemia or acute events like myocardial infarction or stroke.

2. 🧩 Key Structures & Components

  • Endothelium: Innermost arterial lining; dysfunction initiates atherogenesis.
  • Lipid core (necrotic core): Accumulation of cholesterol, cellular debris.
  • Foam cells: Lipid-laden macrophages that ingest oxidized LDL.
  • Smooth muscle cells: Migrate, proliferate, and produce collagen in plaques.
  • Fibrous cap: Collagen-rich layer covering the lipid core.
  • Calcifications: Hardened deposits in advanced lesions.
  • Thrombus: Clot formed on ruptured plaque surface, occluding the vessel.

3. 🔬 Functions, Mechanisms & Relationships

  • Risk factors damage the endothelium, increasing permeability to LDL.
  • LDL penetrates sub-endhelial space, oxidizes, and triggers inflammation.
  • Monocytes adhere, migrate into intima, differentiate into macrophages, and ingest oxidized LDL → foam cells.
  • Accumulation of foam cells forms fatty streaks.
  • Smooth muscle cells migrate from media to intima, producing collagen to form a fibrous cap.
  • Plaque progression involves lipid accumulation, smooth muscle proliferation, and extracellular matrix deposition.
  • Plaque rupture exposes thrombogenic material, activating coagulation cascade → thrombosis.
  • Stable plaques: abundant collagen, thick cap; unstable: lipid-rich, thin cap prone to rupture.
  • Stenosis severity correlates with ischemia; symptoms typically manifest >70% stenosis.
  • Rupture triggers acute ischemic events such as myocardial infarction.

4. Summary Table

ItemKey FeaturesNotes
AtherosclerosisLipid deposits cause arterial narrowing and potential ruptureProgressive, often asymptomatic early
Fatty StreaksEarly, benign, composed of foam cellsMay appear in childhood
Fibrous PlaquesCollagen and smooth muscle form a cap over lipid coreStable or unstable; risk of rupture
Unstable PlaquesLipid-rich, thin fibrous capHigh risk of rupture, thrombosis
Stable PlaquesCollagen-rich, thick fibrous capLess likely to rupture
Risk FactorsHypercholesterolemia, hypertension, smoking, diabetesAffect endothelial health
Rupture & ThrombosisPlaque tear exposes thrombogenic material → clot formationCauses acute ischemia

5. Hierarchical Diagram (ASCII)

Atherosclerosis
 ├─ Endothelial Dysfunction
 │    └─ LDL infiltration & oxidation
 ├─ Fatty Streaks
 │    └─ Foam cells, monocytes, T-cells
 ├─ Fibrous Plaques
 │    ├─ Smooth muscle migration
 │    ├─ Collagen synthesis
 │    └─ Lipid core formation
 └─ Plaque Rupture
     ├─ Cap rupture or fissure
     └─ Thrombus formation → Vessel occlusion

6. ⚠️ High-Yield Pitfalls & Confusions

  • Confusing fatty streaks (benign, early lesion) with advanced plaques.
  • Mistaking stable plaques for unstable due to thick fibrous caps.
  • Overlooking the role of oxidized LDL rather than native LDL.
  • Assuming all plaques cause symptoms; many are silent until severe stenosis.
  • Conflating calcification (a feature of advanced plaques) with early lesions.
  • Underestimating the importance of endothelial dysfunction as a trigger.
  • Misidentifying rupture sites; not all ruptures cause clinical events.
  • Not recognizing that size of stenosis (>70%) correlates with symptoms.

7. ✅ Final Exam Checklist

  • Understand the definition and pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.
  • Identify the key steps: endothelial injury, LDL infiltration, foam cells, fatty streaks.
  • Know the composition and features of fibroatheromas.
  • Differentiate stable vs. unstable plaques.
  • Recognize major risk factors and their mechanisms.
  • Recall the affected arteries and typical clinical presentations.
  • Describe the process leading to plaque rupture and thrombosis.
  • Explain the significance of lumen narrowing (>70%) for symptoms.
  • Distinguish early lesions (fatty streaks) from advanced, complicated plaques.
  • Remember that oxidized LDL and inflammation are central to lesion progression.
  • Be aware of common pitfalls and areas of confusion in interpretation.
  • Link plaque stability with risk of rupture and clinical consequences.
  • Know the primary regions affected: coronary, carotid, iliac, femoral.
  • Recognize the importance of early management of risk factors to prevent progression.
  • Comprehend the role of collagen and smooth muscle in plaque stability.

Revise these points thoroughly to excel in exams on atherosclerosis!

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Teste seu conhecimento sobre Understanding Atherosclerosis and Its Clinical Impact com 21 perguntas de múltipla escolha com correções detalhadas.

1. Which of the following is a key risk factor that contributes to endothelial dysfunction in the development of atherosclerosis?

2. What is the primary lipid involved in the initiation of atherosclerosis?

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Memorize os conceitos chave de Understanding Atherosclerosis and Its Clinical Impact com 36 flashcards interativos.

Endothelial dysfunction — role?

Initiates atherosclerosis by increasing permeability and adhesion.

Atherosclerosis — definition?

Chronic arterial disease with lipid-rich plaques.

LDL oxidation — consequence?

Promotes monocyte attraction and foam cell formation.

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