The Heart in Tangier Disease: Severe Coronary Atherosclerosis with Near Absence of High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol

Abstract
Cardiac necropsy findings are described in a 72-year-old man with Tangier disease whose plasma total cholesterol levels averaged 70 mg/dL, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level was 45 mg/dL, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level was 1.4 mg/dL, and who had coronary artery bypass grafting for severe atherosclerotic coronary artery disease. At necropsy, 24 of the 72 (33%) 5-mm segments of the 4 major (right, left main, left anterior descending, and left circumflex) native coronary arteries and 4 of the 27 (15%) 5-mm segments of the saphenous vein aortocoronary bypass conduits were narrowed by more than 75% in cross-sectional area by atherosclerotic plaques. The plaques were composed primarily (91% to 97%) of fibrous tissue. Oil red O staining, polarized light microscopy, and electron microscopy revealed cholesterol deposits in the plaques and in the walls of coronary arteries, saphenous vein grafts, and aorta. Such deposits also were found in foam cells of histiocytic origin, fibroblasts in all four cardiac valves, and in Schwann cells of cardiac nerves.

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