Arterial Neovascularization and Inflammation in Vulnerable Patients
Top Cited Papers
- 2 November 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 110 (18) , 2843-2850
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.0000146787.16297.e8
Abstract
Background— Atherosclerosis is complicated by cardiovascular events such as myocardial infarction, stroke, or peripheral arterial occlusive disease. Inflammation and pathological neovascularization are thought to precipitate plaque rupture or erosion, both causes of arterial thrombosis and cardiovascular events. We tested the hypothesis that arterial inflammation and angiogenic events are increased throughout the arterial tree in vulnerable patients, ie, in patients who suffered from cardiovascular events, compared with patients who never suffered from complications of atherosclerosis. Methods and Results— In a postmortem study, we quantified the inflammatory infiltrate and microvascular network in the arterial wall of iliac, carotid, and renal arteries. Tissue microarray technology was adapted to investigate full-thickness arterial sectors. We compared 22 patients with symptomatic atherosclerosis with 27 patients who never had suffered from any cardiovascular event. The absolute intimal macrophage content was 2- to 4-fold higher in vulnerable patients at all 3 arterial sites analyzed (P2; P=0.008). Hyperplasia of vasa vasorum was an early and macrophage infiltration was a late sign of symptomatic atherosclerosis. Conclusions— High intimal macrophage content and a hyperplastic network of vasa vasorum characterize vulnerable patients suffering from symptomatic atherosclerosis. These changes are uniformly present in different arterial beds and support the concept of symptomatic atherosclerosis as a panarterial disease.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- From Vulnerable Plaque to Vulnerable PatientCirculation, 2003
- From Vulnerable Plaque to Vulnerable PatientCirculation, 2003
- High‐resolution MRI with cardiac and respiratory gating allows for accurate in vivo atherosclerotic plaque visualization in the murine aortic archMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2003
- Vulnerable Atherosclerotic PlaqueCirculation, 2003
- Abnormal angiogenesis in diabetes mellitusMedicinal Research Reviews, 2002
- Inflammation in atherosclerosisNature, 2002
- AtherosclerosisCell, 2001
- Tissue microarrays for high-throughput molecular profiling of tumor specimensNature Medicine, 1998
- Regional accumulations of T cells, macrophages, and smooth muscle cells in the human atherosclerotic plaque.Arteriosclerosis: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association, Inc., 1986
- Hypothesis: Vasa Vasorum and Neovascularization of Human Coronary ArteriesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984