Studies of hypercholesterolemia in the nonhuman primate. I. Changes that lead to fatty streak formation.

Abstract
Morphologic studies resulting from events that occur during the development of the lesions of atherosclerosis were studied in chronic, diet-induced hypercholesterolemia in a series of nonhuman primates. Within 12 days of hypercholesterolemia in Macaca nemestrina, monocytes became adherent to the surface of the endothelium. These monocytes appeared to migrate subendothelially, accumulate lipid, and become lipid-laden macrophages (foam cells). Within a month, a "serofibrinous insudate" formed together with variable numbers of subendothelial lipid-laden macrophages. By the second month, foam cells increased in number, often in multilayers, to form a fatty streak. Concomitantly, the luminal surface of the arteries became increasingly irregular due to the subendothelial accumulation of foam cells. Numerous monocytes continued to attach to the endothelial surface over the fatty streaks, and many of them appeared to enter the intima and participate in the growth of the fatty streaks. Lipid-laden smooth muscle ce...