Editorials |
From the CVPath Institute Inc, Gaithersburg, Md.
Correspondence to Renu Virmani, MD, Medical Director, CVPath Institute Inc, 19 Firstfield Road, Gaithersburg, Md 20878. E-mail rvirmani{at}cvpath.org
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
See page 1159
Although there are many detailed autopsy studies describing various lesion morphologies, little is known how human atherosclerosis progresses from early to more advanced plaques, marked by the formation of a necrotic core. This important question remains, in part, from a lack of direct experimental testing in prospective models of human disease. Moreover, potentially relevant finding in animals are difficult to associate with humans because the pathologic change of atherosclerosis in man cannot be definitely equated with animals. Although the categorization of human lesions has provided valuable information concerning descriptive morphological events, in particular those of fatal plaques,1 static two-dimensional images afforded by conventional histology offer limited insight into spatial relationship or sequences of events critical to lesion formation. Therefore, one of the major obstacles to understanding how atherosclerosis develops and progresses arises from the inability to achieve biological visualization of arterial wall.
The importance of the early neointima as a fertile soil for the development of plaque cannot be overemphasized.4 The presence of a thickened intimal layer, observed in 30% of newborns, is a fundamental structural difference that separates human arteries from animals, which the intima is primarily defined as a single layer of endothelial cells separated from underlying media by a relatively thin basement membrane and rare smooth muscle cells. This earliest intimal layer is exposed to various blood borne components and positive hemodynamic forces, which strongly influence atherosclerosis development in the arterial wall. The earliest pathologic events are not restricted to cellular elements alone as the extracellular matrix proteins also contribute significantly. The influence of the extracellular matrix proteins in early lesion formation was first put forth in a seminal paper by Tabas and colleagues, describing their selective ability to accommodate enzymes that specialize in lipid retention.5 This initial process is thought critical to formation of the necrotic core, although the precise sequence of events directing its development remain unresolved. The pervasive question of how necrotic cores form is pivotal because lesions with lipid-rich cores eventually retain the potential to become unstable and rupture, which is the underlying cause in approximately 65% of all sudden coronary deaths.1,6 Indeed, revisiting the early plaque to resolve the question of how lipid pools convert to more advanced fibroatheromatous plaques (lesions with necrotic cores) presents one of the most challenging issues.
| Advanced Coronary Lesions Occur at Specific Anatomic Sites |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Three-Dimensional Assessment of Early Atherosclerosis |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The authors report the earliest change in the arterial wall (defined as grade 0) as diffuse intimal thickening, consisting of smooth muscle cells and extracellular matrix with little or no accumulated lipid, but a few macrophages in the superficial layer. All cases of grade 1 and most with grade 2 demonstrated what the authors define as PIT characterized by extracellular lipid deposits in the outer intimal layer with lesional macrophages being more numerous as the lipid grades increased. The majority of grade 3 lesions were considered fatty streaks where there was greater Sudan IV staining along with biglycan and decorin localized within the outer areas of the intima while macrophage/foam cells were localized near the inner intima toward the lumen.
Notably, lipid grades correlated positively with advancing age, but not with risk factors of total cholesterol, triglyceride levels, or smoking status. Although a history of smoking was associated with enhanced macrophage infiltration, it did not correlate with accumulated lipid. Comparison of similar aged diabetics also showed no differences in the amount of arterial wall lipid. In the majority of cases, lipid staining was distributed eccentrically and more strongly positive in the proximal and branching portions of the artery than distal regions. In lower lesion grades, the vertical distribution of lipid was more concentrated in the outer intimal surface with the proportion of lipid in this region increasing with advancing age. In contrast, the vertical distribution of macrophages was most prominent in the inner intima where there was modified LDL and monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1). The precise stimulus for lipid modifications or MCP-1 expression is unclear from the present data because these elements could not be attributed to traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
It is clear, however, that lipid accumulation in the deep intimal layer represents the earliest stage of lesion growth marked by the expression of proteoglycans, biglycan and decorin. It is well known that transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß plays an important role in the production of proteoglycans and hence its importance in early lesion development. On the contrary, foam-cell rich fatty streaks are the less dominant early plaque types, which are unlikely to progress where in fact they are shown to regress in some regions of the thoracic and abdominal aorta later in life.10 Similarly, the conversion of fatty streaks into more advanced atherosclerotic plaques in the coronary vasculature appears to be an unrelated pathological process.11
In the study by Nakashima, early lipid accumulation was mostly localized to the extracellular space between smooth muscle cells or near elastin fibers.3 The distribution of lipid correlated with the expression of select proteoglycans where biglycan, decorin, and versican, as shown previously, accumulate in topographical distinct patterns within atherosclerotic lesions.12 In grade 0 lesions, biglycan was distributed concentrically toward the outer side of the intima, and decorin to a lesser extent. In all histological sections showing PIT with severe and/or diffuse lipid deposits, the distribution of apolipoproteins coincided with regions positive for Sudan IV and biglycan, however, the correlation with decorin was less consistent.
| Understanding Transitional Plaques by 3D Histology |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Based on our observations, macrophages infiltrating into lipid pools become trapped and eventually undergo apoptosis liberating potent inflammatory cytokines and growth factors, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), and lipids. Extracellular matrix degradation together with macrophage cell death and early necrosis marks the conversion of PIT into an early fibroatheroma (Figure 2). The tool of 3D histology as described in the present study would help us gain a better understanding of this relationship at the spatial and molecular level. Similarly, this transition may represent the point of "angiogenic switch" where neovascularization plays a more dominant role in plaque progression.
|
Understanding the spatial involvement of relevant biologic markers in reference to a timeline offers, for the moment, the best view of atherosclerotic disease progression in humans. In particular, 3D analysis of plaques may help explain the most imperative question as to why certain lipid pool lesions convert to a more proinflammatory state with ensuing necrosis whereas others appear relatively quiescent for decades. Similarly this technique would allow further delineation of relevant markers of plaque progression involving focal attachment, proteolysis, cell signaling, recruitment of inflammatory cells, and cell death. Moreover, the impact of physical characteristics such as low- and high-shear stress points relative to arterial branching, necrotic core formation, and fibrous cap thinning (lesion instability) could be further defined in relation to plaque rupture. Finally, 3D spatial resolution at the molecular level would help further characterize the role of angiogenesis in morphological subtypes as a prelude to intraplaque hemorrhage and expansion of the necrotic core.13
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
R.M. has received company-sponsored research support from Medtronic AVE; Guidant; Abbott; GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences; Takeda; Atrium Medical Corporation; ev3; Conor Medsystems; TopSpin Medical (Israel) Ltd.; Paracor Medical, Inc.; OrbusNeich; Terumo Corporation; Vascular Therapies, LLC; CardioKinetix; Cardiovascular Research Foundation; Osiris Therapeutics, Inc.; Bard Peripheral Vascular, Inc.; Edwards Life Sciences; Biomerix; Nitinol Device and Components.; Sorin Biomedical Cardio S.r.l; 3F Therapeutics; Hancock Jaffee Labs, Inc.; Cardiovascular Device Design; Angel Medical Systems, Inc.; Biotegra; Cardica, Inc.; Concentric Medical; Cordis Corporation; Cryo Vascular Systems, Inc.; CVRx, Inc.; diaDexus, Inc.; InfraReDx, Inc.; InterVascular/Datascope; Kensey Nash Corporation; Medeikon Corporation; MedNova USA, Inc.; Microvention, Inc.; Oregon Medical Laser Center; Spectranetics Corporation; Takeda Pharmaceuticals North America; Toray Industries, Inc.; Vascular Concepts; Volcano Therapeutics, Inc.; BioSensors International; and Alchimer S.A. R.M. is a consultant for Medtronic AVE; Guidant; W.L. Gore; Cryo Vascular Systems, Inc.; Volcano Therapeutics Inc.; Prescient Medical; Medicon; CardioMind, Inc.; Direct Flow and Atrium Medical Corporation.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Related Article:
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
I. Tabas, K. J. Williams, and J. Boren Subendothelial Lipoprotein Retention as the Initiating Process in Atherosclerosis: Update and Therapeutic Implications Circulation, October 16, 2007; 116(16): 1832 - 1844. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
ATVB Home | Subscriptions | Archives | Feedback | Authors | Help | AHA Journals Home | Search Copyright © 2007 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited. |