Title: Cardiovascular pathology Dr D S O
1Cardiovascular pathologyDr D S OBriain October
2005
- Systemic pathology 6 lectures
- Topic 2-5 min discussion, then summary panel
- Segments
- ischaemic heart disease (24 panels)
- Rheumatic fever (3), Congenital heart disease
(4), other valve diseases (4), infective
endocarditis (3) - Hypertension (10)
- myocarditis (2), cardiomyopathy (4), transplants
(4) - pericardium (2) tumours (2)
- Chemical pathology (Dr Crowley)
- atherosclerosis (20), aneurysms (4)
- vasculitis (7), vessels (3)
2Ischaemic Heart Disease
- Imbalance in the supply and demand for oxygen
(also for nutrients and for removal of
metabolites) in cardiac muscle. - Increased demand Exercise, emotion
- Decreased supply
- Reduced oxygen (anaemia, cyanosis, carbon
monoxide, cigarettes). - Reduced coronary flow (atheroma, thrombus,
spasm, shock).
3Ischaemic Heart Disease Epidemic
- Causes 80 of cardiac mortality
- Peaked in US in 1960s, 40 decline since
- Different patterns in some Western countries
- Cause of decline Changing lifestyle (diet,
smoking, exercise) - Better therapy (CCU, thrombolysis, arrhythmia
therapy, CABG, angioplasty)
4Atherosclerotic Coronary Artery Disease
Distribution
- Narrowing of greater than 75 is clinically
significant - In 1/3 of patients one vessel is involved, in
1/3, two vessels and in 1/3, three vessels. - Sites Proximal 2 cm of LAD and circumflex,
proximal 1/3 of right coronary artery. - Less frequent Secondary diagonal, obtuse,
marginal branches and posterior descending
artery. - Rare Intramyocardial branches
5Atherosclerotic Coronary Artery Disease
Clinical Syndromes
- Silent Infarct
- Angina Pectoris
- Myocardial Infarct
- Chronic Ischaemic Heart Disease
- Sudden Death
6Angina Pectoris
- Stable Pain with exercise, emotion or other
increases in demand. ST segment
depressedsubendocardial ischaemia - Prinzmetal Rest pain, ST segment raised
transmural ischaemia. Due to spasm, (? cause
vasoconstrictive humoral factors, mast cells,
nerves atherosclerosis usually present.) - Unstable Pain, increasing in duration and
severity with less effort or at rest, (also
called preinfarction angina or acute coronary
insufficiency). Caused by plaque enlarging,
fissured, ulcerated, ruptured, vasospasm,
platelet aggregation and activation
7Atherosclerotic Coronary Artery DiseaseVascular
obstruction
- Platelets Plaque rupture (platelets adhere and
become activated), thrombus forms (microemboli
may occur), release of histamine, 5HT,
thromboxane - Vasospasm Demonstrated angiographically,
rarely causes infarct in absence of atheroma, may
rupture plaque, role of nerve supply and
thromboxane - Other Emboli, trauma, arteritis (SLE, PAN,
etc), cocaine (arrhythmia, spasm), Haemodynamic
effects (shock, coronary sinus obstruction).
8Myocardial Infarct - Coronary Artery Lesions
- 90 of infarcts are supplied by an artery which
has a thrombus over an ulcerated or fissured
plaque - Platelets activated aggregate to form thrombus
(embolus) vasospasm, occlude. Deaths under 4
hours 90 have thrombus over 12 hours 60
have thrombus (thrombolysis) - 10 without thrombus (usually have severe
atherosclerosis) Spasm, platelet aggregates,
emboli (mural thrombus, endocarditis,
paradoxical), arteritis, cocaine, tachycardia or
arrhythmia
9Evolution of infarct
- 4 hours No morphological changes (subtle
ultrastructural changes). - 8 hours Oedema, myocytolysis, contraction band
necrosis, wavy fibres. - 24 hours Grossly pale, acute inflammatory
infiltrate. - Days Infarct becomes clearly defined grossly,
centre softens, a hyperaemic rim appears,
granulation tissue appears. - Weeks Organisation proceeds leaving an organised
scar by about six weeks.
10Myocardial Infarct, Morphology
- Experimentally 20 minutes of occlusion
ischaemic necrosis begins in the subendocardium
(least collaterals and vessels most compressible) - Infarct size Proportional to extent and duration
of ischaemia, collateral supply, metabolic
demands may be transmural or subendocardial. - Site Left ventricle (If adjacent, right
ventricle is involved in 25, adjacent atrium in
5), isolated right ventricle in 1 (usually
following marked right ventricle hypertrophy and
strain). - Distribution LAD (50) Anterior 2/3 septum,
anterior wall, apex. RCA (35) Posterior wall and
septum. - LCA (15) Lateral left ventricular wall
- Infarcts are usually single may extend
(retrograde thrombus, vasospasm, arrhythmia),
reperfusion injury.
11Cardiac Enzymes
- Creatine Kinase
- MB isoenzyme specific for heart
- Rises 4-8h, peaks 18h, falls 2-3d
- Troponin T or I
- Similar start, remain for 7-10d
12Myocardial Infarct, Clinical
- Asymptomatic (15).
- Symptomatic (60). Sudden pain, crushing
character, retrosternal, radiation (left
shoulder, arm, jaw), associated sweating, nausea,
vomiting, dyspnoea, indigestion. - Sudden death (25).
- ECG new Q waves, ST and T wave abnormalities,
arrhythmias, evolving pattern, 20 are
non-specific or silent. - Enzymes Soluble cytoplasmic enzymes (CK 4h-4d,
Troponin I and T 4h-10d, AAT 8h-4d, LDH 1d-14d),
LDH and CK isoenzyme patterns. - Image Echo (mural dyskinesia), Angiography,
perfusion scintography, MRI.
13Effects of Myocardial Infarction
- Decompensation Muscle is dead, injured,
stunned, disorganised, - Infarct dyskinesia aneurysm, mural thrombus,
embolism. - Infarct rupture tamponade, septal shunt.
- Papillary muscle infarct or rupture (mitral
valve dysfunction) - Arrhythmias provoked in injured tissue.
- Haemorrhagic pericarditis.
14Myocardial infarct complications
- Uncomplicated (15)
- Sudden death (25)
- Arrhythmia (sinus brady-, tachy-cardia,
ventricular tachycardia, PVC, V fibrillation,
asystole, block) - Left ventricular failure (60)
- Pump failure (40 of myocardium damaged)
- Shock (10)
- Rupture (free wall, septum, papillary muscle)
- Thromboembolism
- Mortality 35 in one year (50 sudden, 25 in
hospital. 10 die each subsequent year.
15Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty
- Mechanisms
- Plaque compressionredistribute soft contents
(most human plaques are hard) - Plaque fracturebreaking, cracking, splitting
- healing/repair may change diameter
- Fracture with intimal flaps and localised
medial dissection - Stretching of plaque-free wall (70 of all, 24
severe plaques, are eccentric) - Stretching of concentric diseased wall
16Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary
Angioplastycomplications
- Early closure
- Spasm
- Thrombus
- Dissection with large intimal flap
- Relaxation of overstreched wall of eccentric
plaque - Subintimal bleed (concurrent thrombolysis)
- Late chronic stenosis (17-47)
- Fibrocellular intimal proliferation
(platelets,thromboxane A2,GFmyofibroblast and
endotherial proliferation) - (This also occurs in the left main artery
(local injury or extension) - Elastic recoil of plaque-free wall or recoil of
concentric lesion - Progression of plaque
17Myocardial Infarct, Demography
- Age (only 5 under 40)
- Male (risk x 6 under 45, less when older)
- Smoker (risk x 5, proportional to number smoked)
- Other personality (type A increased risk),
exercise and moderate alcohol protect - Western countries risk was increased, now falling
18Chronic Ischaemic Heart Disease
- Insidious congestive cardiac failure (possibly
remote myocardial infarct or angina) - Morphology Brown atrophy, patchy fibrosis, old
infarcts - Findings possibly left ventricular dilation,
murmur, calcification - ECG Normal, bundle branch block or non-specific
changes
19Sudden Cardiac Death
- Ischaemic heart disease (at least 75 stenosis),
occluding thrombus in 1/2, new infarct in 1/4,
old infarct in 1/3 - Other coronary artery disease anatomic
anomolies, embolism, arteritis, dissection - Myocardial disease hypertrophic obstructive
cardiomyopathy, right ventricular dysplasia,
myocarditis, amyloid, sarcoid - Valve disease aortic valve stenosis, floppy
mitral valve infective endocarditis. - Conduction defects
- Electrolyte abnormalities
20Congestive Cardiac Failure
- State resulting from impaired cardiac function
and resulting in insufficient output for the
metabolic requirements of tissues and organs - Excess Load.
- B) Decreased pumping ability.
- Muscle fibre
- a) death
- b) dysfunction (decreased adrenergic drive,
decreased receptor density, decreased calcium
(excitation, contraction, coupling), altered
mitochondrial and ATP-ase function, vasospasm of
microcirculation. - Decreased output - Forward failure.
- Damming back - Backward failure.
21Cardiac Failure - Compensation
- Dilation produces increased force of contraction
and stroke volume (Starling) - Hypertrophy
- Increased blood volume
- But increased muscle mass and blood volume
require more work excess dilation reduced
efficiency - No morphological difference between compensated
and non-compensated heart look for hypoxic and
congestive effects remote from the heart
22Left Ventricular Failure
- Heart Hypertrophy and dilation of left
ventricle (except mitral stenosis) - Lungs Congestion, oedema of lung and pleural
space, dyspnoea, orthopnoea, paroxysmal nocturnal
dyspnoea, cough with frothy blood-tinged sputum - Kidney Decreased perfusion (ischaemic tubular
changes), renin angiotensin aldosterone system
(increased NaCl, H20, ECF and blood volume) - Brain Hypoxia irritable, decreased
concentration and attention span, stupor, coma
23Right Ventricular Failure
- A) Secondary to left ventricular failure
- B) Cor pulmonale, cardiomyopathy, constrictive
pericarditis, tricuspid and pulmonary valve
disease - Liver Enlarged, chronic passive congestion
(nutmeg), if severe central necrosis with
fibrosis result in cardiac sclerosis (cardiac
cirrhosis) - Spleen Enlarged, congested, dilated sinusoids
and fibrotic walls - Kidney Congested
- Subcutis Oedema, anasarca
- Pleura Effusion (especially on right)
- Portal System Congestion of GIT, spleen ascites
24Heart Failure
Organ LV Failure RV Failure Effect
Lung Oedema, cough, dyspnoea.
Kidney Fluid retention, decreased perfusion.
Brain Hypoxia.
Liver - Enlarged, congested.
Spleen - Enlarged, congested.
Portal - Ascites, GIT congestion.
Subcutis - Oedema.
25Cor Pulmonale
- Right ventricular enlargement secondary to
disordered structure or function of lungs - Causes
- Lung parenchymal disease COAD, pulmonary
fibrosis, cystic fibrosis - Vascular disease pulmonary embolism, vasculitis
- Chest disorders Kyphoscoliosis, obesity,
neuromuscular disorders - Effect Narrowing of pulmonary vascular bed
(hyperviscosity-polycythemia) - Pulmonary hypertension -gt cor pulmonale (acute
due to pulmonary embolism-or chronic). Right
ventricular wall hypertrophies then dilates and
fails
26Rheumatic fever
- Acute recurrent inflammation associated with
reaction to streptococcal infection. Occurs 1-5
weeks after Group A, ß haemolytic streptococcal
infection, mainly children (5-15 years)
27Rheumatic Fever, Jones Criteria
- Major criteria of Jones
- Polyarthritis sequential involvement of large
joints - Erythema marginatum
- Subcutaneous nodules
- Sydenham's chorea rapid purposeless movements.
- Carditis
- Also (minor criteria) fever, arthralgia,
previous rheumatic fever, prolonged PR interval,
acute phase reactants (ESR, CRP or WCC increased)
- Jones (AHA) 2 major or 1 major and 2 minor
criteria high probability of rheumatic fever. - Recent streptococcal infection increases
probability
28Rheumatic Fever, Pathogenesis
- 1. Follows streptococcal infection but lesions
sterile - 2. Streptococcal antibodies anti streptolysin 0
(AS0) hyaluronidase - 3. Most frequent after severe streptococcal
infections - 4. Recur with repeated streptococcal infection
- 5. 90 decline in incidencebetter living
conditions, antibiotics, organism has changed. - 6. Individual susceptibility genetic.
29Rheumatic Fever, Pathogenesis
- Aetiology
- Cross reaction
- Hyaluronate of humansstreptococcal capsule.
- Streptococcal membranemuscle sarcolemma
- Streptococcal M proteincardiac myosin
- Autoimmune - antiheart antibody (but ?
cross reaction) - Pathology Aschoff Body Fibrinoid necrosis
surrounded by mononuclear cells with Anitschkew
cells (with caterpillar nucleus), pericarditis
(bread butter), myocarditis, endocarditis
(verrucae on lines of closure) McCallum's
patches. Heal by scarring - distort valve
30Rheumatic Fever Cardiac involvement
- Acute - in 2/3 of children, 1/3 of adults.
- Pericarditis, arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation),
prolonged PR interval, auricular thrombus,
cardiac dilation (MI murmur). Valve involvement
(MI, AI), (death 1)) - Chronic - if first attack severe or when very
young. - MV in 2/3, MV AV 1/4, TV (Few), PV rare
- Valve fibrosis, calcification, fused commissures
(fish mouth) chordae. - Mitral stenosis LA dilation, auricular thrombus,
pulmonary congestion, RVH
31Congenital Heart Disease - Varieties
- a) Shunts Chamber (or vessel) to chamber (or
vessel). - Right to left - Early cyanosis, clubbing,
hypertrophic osteoarthropathy, polycythemia
(cerebral thrombosis). - Left to right - cyanose tardive. Increased
pulmonary flow with vascular sclerosis,
pulmonary hypertension, reversed flow (right to
left). Shunt complication. paradoxical embolism,
infected embolism, infective endocarditis. - b) Obstruction Non-cyanotic. Failure to
thrive, retarded development, intercurrent
diseases of childhood. - c) Malposition Ectopia, dextrocardia (isolated
or other anomalies) situs inversus totalis
(Kartagener sinusitis, bronchiectasis, immotile
cilia).
32Congenital Heart Disease - Early Cyanosis
- 1. Tetralogy of Fallot
- VSD, overriding aorta, right ventricular outflow
obstruction, RVH. - Outflow obstruction (infundibular, valve,
supravalve) dictates severity. - 2. Transposition (multiple combinations with
atria, ventricles, vessels) - Commonest RA-RV-Aorta
- Mixing essential ASD in all, most also have
PDA, or VSD. - 3. Truncus arteriosus
- Common aorta PA with three-cusped valve and
coronary arteries - Usually other cardiac defects
- 4. Tricuspid Atresia
- RV hypoplasia (often pulmonary valve and PA
hypoplasia, ASD)
33Congenital Heart Disease - Late Cyanosis
- 1. Ventricular septal defect
- Development of septum (week 5-6) common
ventricle divided by muscular membranous septum
- 2. Atrial septal defect
- Development of septum (week 4) atrial canal
closed by septum primum, (ostium primum). Valve
effect allows RA-LA flow, closes at birth - 3. Patent ductus arteriosus
- Ductus closes day 1-2 (High 02, low PGE)
34Congenital Heart Disease - Late Cyanosis
- Ventricular septal defect
- Size dictates effect tiny to cor triloculare
biatrium (pulmonary stenosis) - Small 5mm (Roger), well tolerated, 50 close
spontaneously, loud murmers thrill,
endocarditis - Large pulmonary hypertension, shunt reverses
- Atrial septal defect
- Ostium primum defect (5). Often Down's syndrome
- Ostium secundum (90). Often other defects
- Sinus venosus (5). Near SVC abnormal pulmonary
vein return. - Lutembacher syndrome ASD with pulmonary
hypertension - Patent ductus arteriosus
- 90 PDA isolated (important for survival in
other forms of CHD). - Machinery murmur, systolic thrill. LVH, dilated PA
35Congenital Heart Disease - Obstructive
- 1. Coarctation of Aorta - systolic murmur
thrill - Preductal infants, (PDA) RVH with cyanosis
of lower body - Postductal adults (PDA in 50) hypertension
in upper body insufficiency (claudication, cold)
in lower body. Large collateral vessels
intercostal, axillary, mammary with rib notching - Survive to adulthood cardiomegaly, CCF,
Infective aortitis, aortic rupture. Correct
surgically - 2. Pulmonary stenosis
- Atresia (poor outlook) or stenosis surgery,
balloon valvuloplasty - 3. Aortic stenosis
- systolic murmur thrill, usually isolated defect
- atresia (no survival) or stenosis -survival
prolonged risk of sudden death, infection,
haemodynamic effects
36Other Valve Diseases
- Calcific aortic stenosis
- (Congenital stenosis) bicuspid (1 or
population), rheumatic or normal valve becomes
calcified - sclerotic, later stenotic. - Result LVH, CCF angina, syncope, sudden death
- Mitral annular calcification
- asymptomatic, seen on imaging (rarely
regurgitation, stenosis, arrhythmias, thrombi,
infection)
37Mitral valve prolapse
- Ballooned (floppy) valve with myxoid degeneration
of valve fibrosa - 7 of population, peak young females (in Marfan
syndrome, abnormal fibrillin gene) - Asymptomatic - mid systolic click late systolic
murmur - Minority chest pain, dyspnoea, fatigue,
psychiatric symptoms - Benign (Rarely infective endocarditis, mitral
insufficiency, arrhythmias, emboli with
infarction, sudden death)
38Infective endocarditis
- Microbiological colonisation of valve. (Similar
effect Colonise endocardium, aorta, aneurysms) - Valve lesion
- Abnormal valves Rheumatic (especially small
shunt, jet lesions), congenital (VSD, PDA,
Fallot), mitral prolapse, calcific stenosis
(bicuspid), prosthetic valves, catheters - Normal valves
- Risk
- In neutropenia, immunodeficiency,
immunosuppression, IVDA - Seeding
- Infection, surgery, dentist, IVDA. trivial
injury, transient gut or mouth seeding
39Infective endocarditis
- Microbiological colonisation of valve. (Similar
effect Colonise endocardium, aorta, aneurysms) - Valve lesion
- Abnormal valves Rheumatic (especially small
shunt, jet lesions), congenital (VSD, PDA,
Fallot), mitral prolapse, calcific stenosis
(bicuspid), prosthetic valves, catheters - Normal valves
- Risk
- In neutropenia, immunodeficiency,
immunosuppression, IVDA - Seeding
- Infection, surgery, dentist, IVDA. trivial
injury, transient gut or mouth seeding
40Infective Endocarditis Organisms
- Organisms
- 65 streptococcal alpha haemolytic (viridens),
bovis, faecalis - 25 staphylococcus aureus.
- Others S. pneumoniae, GNB (E.Coli, N.
gonorrhoea). - 10 sterile.
- Precipitating factors
- agglutinating antibodies, adhesion factors,
platelet -fibrin deposits on valve.
41Infective Endocarditis Clinical
- Systemic fever, fatigue, weight loss, flu-like
illness, chills. - Murmur (changing in acute, absent in 10).
- Emboli subungual, retina (Roth spots) to
brain, spleen, kidney (lung). - Metastatic abscess (in acute) cerebral,
meninges, renal. - Renal Embolic infarct, focal or diffuse
glomerulonephritis. - Cardiac valve stenosis or incompetence, abscess,
graft dehiscence, pericarditis
42Infective endocarditis course
- Acute (days)
- virulent organism, large invasion, low
resistance. On normal or prosthetic valve, IVDA,
catheter. Large ulcerating vegetation, perforate,
erode valve. - Chronic (months)
- low virulence, partial healing.
43Endocarditis, other forms
- Non-Bacterial thrombotic endocarditis
- 1-5mm, fibrin, on leaflet (lines of closure),
sterile. - marantic (chronic debilitating disease) or
following catheter. - Associated with DVT or pulmonary embolus
(hypercoagulable states) - Mucinous carcinomas (may secrete procoagulant)
- Complication (Rare), emboli, infarct, infection.
- Libman Sacks SLE (and antiphospholipid
syndrome). - 1-4mm, fibrin necrotic debris overlying
fibrinoid necrosis. - Anywhere in leaflet - MV TV, may be multiple.
Also lesions in myocardium, pericardium and
vessels
44Malignant carcinoid syndrome
- Plaques of fibrous tissue on valve and
endocardium of right ventricle outflow tract - Syndrome
- Flushing, cramps, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea
(100) - Cardiac disease (50)
- Asthma (33)
- Syndrome occurs in less than 1 of all carcinoids
but in 10 of carcinoids with large hepatic
metastases (rarely with ovarian or lung
carcinoids) - Mediators 5HT, kallikrein, bradykinin,
histamine, prostaglandins - Metabolism in liver, monoamine oxidases of lungs
45Prosthetic valves
- Types
- A) Mechanical occluders
- B) porcine or bovine bioprostheses
- Complications in 5-10 (emboli 3, infection 1)
per patient year - Paravalvular leak
- Thromboembolism (anticoagulate mechanical
valves) emboli, infection, obstruct movement of
valve - Infections at tissue interface (ring abscess),
also at cusp in bioprosthesis - Deterioration Bioprostheses, calcification and
degeneration in 25 - Also Haemolysis, fibrous tissue ingrowth
effecting function
46Hypertension
- High blood pressure is common and asymptomatic,
- 25 of population gt140/90
- Incidence increases age, black, young males,
older females - More severe younger, blacks.
- Consequences Cardiac, cerebral and renal disease
47Hypertension
- Types Primary 95
- Secondary 5 (renal, vascular, endocrine)
- Course Benign 95
- Accelerated (malignant) 5
- Compensated / decompensated.
- BP Cardiac output X peripheral vascular
(arteriolar) resistance. - Factors Blood volume, ECF volume, total body
Na. - Regulation renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
system.
48Terminology
- How to say
- "we have some ideas but we're not sure of the
cause" - primary
- ideopathic
- agnogenic
- cryptogenic
- essential
49Essential Hypertension
- Pathogenesis Sodium retention and/or
vasoconstriction - Upper limit of the continuous variable of blood
pressure - Genetic factors (polygenic)
- Twin, sibling, familial, racial (blacks),
animal (rat strains) - Rarely single gene defects for aldosterone
metabolism, sodium resorption - Environment
- Exiled Chinese incidence increased behavior,
stress, obesity, OCT - Dietary sodium animal study (rats), remote
peoples exposed to salt - a) defect in Na excretion
- b) defect in cell membrane Na or Ca transport
- (?Ca - ?phosphorylation - ?response to
vasoconstrictors) - c) sympathetic response (stress, neurogenic
factors)
50Sodium Homeostasis
- Total body sodium regulates blood volume and
cardiac output - Influenced by
- Renin angiotensin system.
- ?Blood volume -?GFR - ?proximal tubule Na
resorption. - Atrial natriuretic factor inhibits (volume
expansion -?GFR -?distal tubule Na resorption). - Renal vasodepressors
- a) prostaglandins, b) kallikrein-kinin system, c)
platelet activating factor. - Vasoconstrictors angiotensin II, catechol
amines, thromboxane, leukotriene, endothelin
51Hypertension - Morphology
- Adaptive response to pressure or volume
overload - Myocyte cytoplasm and nucleus enlarged.
- New myofibrils, filaments, mitochondria,
ribosomes - (later degeneration, loss of myofibres, cell
atrophy, interstitial fibrosis) - Left ventricle Concentric hypertrophy
(normal LV thickness 1.4 cm) dilates with
decompensation
52Hypertension - Effects
- Compensation - none.
- Decompensate - CCF
- Thick wall increases 02 requirement and
diffusion distance - Dilation - eventually overstretches fibres
- Myocyte degeneration and fibrosis - stiffness -
impairs diastolic filling (stroke volume) - Atherosclerosis
53Benign nephrosclerosis
- Associations age, diabetes, hypertension.
- a) Arteriole walls thickened, hyaline, and lumen
narrowed - Hyaline plasma protein, lipids, basement
membrane, intracellular matrix. - b) Fibroelastic hyperplasia (interlobular
arcuate arteries) - narrowing. Reduplication of
elastic lamina, increased fibromuscular tissue in
media. - Secondary effects but may sustain aggravate
hypertension. - Effect - loss of tubules, interstitial fibrosis,
damaged glomeruli, cortical narrowing, granular
kidney surface, mild reduction in size of kidney, - mild reduction in function and reserve.
54Accelerated (malignant) hypertension - Clinical
- Medical emergency effects young, male, blacks
- CNS papilloedema, visual effects, encephalopathy
headaches, nausea, vomiting, coma, fits - CVS failure
- Renal proteinuria, haematuria (microscopic or
gross), altered renal function, later failure - 50 mortality in 3 months untreated - 50
mortality in 5 years treated. - Death - uremia (CNS or CVS disease)
55Hyperplastic arteriosclerosis - Pathology
- De novo.
- On benign hypertension.
- On renal disease (GN, reflux, scleroderma )
- a) fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles (fibrin
necrotising inflammation) - b) hyperplastic arteriolitis (arterioles and
interlobular arteries) onion-skinning with
smooth muscle and collagen. - Effect narrowed arterioles, necrotic
glomeruli, thrombosed capillaries, ischaemic
atrophy, infarction, high renin, endothelial
injury (activated platelets, coagulation system
- thrombus).
56Secondary Hypertension (Mechanisms)
- Renal a) Renin increase renovascular
- b) Volume excess acute GN
- c) Mixed.
- Other Primary hyperaldosteronism ( blood
volume) - Phaeochromocytoma (vasoconstriction -
(nor)adrenaline) - Oral contraceptives (renin angiotensin)
- Periarteritis nodosa (renin angiotensin)
57Renal Artery Stenosis
- Goldblatt. Hypertension proportional to
constriction in one renal artery (Dog). Increased
renin from JGA reverse with surgery or
angiotension II antagonists. But secondary renal
changes may lead to persisting hypertension - 70 have atheromatous plaque at origin of artery
(males, diabetes, age) 2/3 curable - 30 fibromuscular dysplasia (females,young) 90
curable Fibromuscular thickening of intima, media
or adventitia multiple (or single) artery (or
branches) unilateral (or bilateral) - Morphology- In ischaemic kidney ischaemic
changes, JGA hyperplastic, arterioles normal. In
other kidney hypertensive changes. - Clinical (Bruit) IVP small kidney, delayed
function. Arteriogramvisualise stenosis,
segmental beaded effect. Measure renal vein
renin.
58Myocarditis.
- Pathology Leucocyte infiltration and myocyte
degeneration or necrosis. - Heart is normal sized or
enlarged. - Patchy haemorrhagic foci,
pale flabby myocardium. - May involve one or several
chambers. - Normal peri- and
endocardium. - Clinical Asymptomatic.
- Fatigue, dyspnoea,
palpitations, chest discomfort, fever. - Arrhythmia.
- Sudden onset congestive
cardiac failure, murmur (dilated AV valves).
59Myocarditis, Aetiology.
- Viral Coxsachie A, B, ECHO, polio, influenza A,
B, HIV. Occurs days to weeks after a respiratory
or neurological infection (is occasionally
primary). Cell mediated immunity (activated
macrophages, CD8 lymphocytes), cells attack
virus- containing myocytes. - T. Cruzi South American Trypanosomiasis
(Chagas disease). Myocarditis in 80, 10 die
acutely. - Trichinosis, Lyme disease (borrelia
borgdorferi). - Collagen Diseases Rheumatic fever, SLE.
- Drug Hypersensitivity (penicillin,
sulphonamides), toxicity (diphtheria toxin,
doxorubicin, catechol amine). - Transplant rejection (cyclosporin is
cytotoxic). - Sarcoid.
- Giant cell, Fiedlers myocarditis.
60Cardiomyopathy
- Non-inflammatory heart muscle disease of unknown
cause. - Exclude Inflammatory, hypertensive, congenital,
valve and pericardial disease. - Primary Dilated (congestive) more than 90
- Hypertrophic
- Restrictive (obliterative) rare
- Secondary.
61Dilated (Congestive) Cardiomyopathy
- Heart weight increased, 4 chamber dilation,
mural thrombi left ventricle (right ventricle,
atria), valves and coronary arteries normal. - Biopsy Fibre hypertrophy, focal fibrosis,
endocardial thickening, foci of inflammatory
cells, (normal in 1/4). - Associations
- Alcohol Direct effect, thiamine deficiency,
cobalt. - Peripartum Nutritional, hypertensive,
metabolic effects,
- occurs in poor multiparous women, regresses in
50. - Genetic dystrophin gene defect in 30
- Post Viral Evidence of remote myocarditis.
- Iron
- Arrhythmogenic RV dysplasia, familial (ch 14
defect) - Clinical Relentless congestive failure, 25 five
year survival.
62Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
- Also termed Asymmetric septal hypertrophy (ASH),
Ideopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis
(IHSS), Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
(HOCM) -
- Heart enlarged, predominantly left ventricle,
basal part (occasionally other chambers
predominate), Asymmetric or symmetric,
banana-shaped cavity, outflow obstructed by
muscle (a disorder of diastole). - Endocardial thickening, mural plaques, mitral
valve thickening, Intramural coronary arteries. - Microscopy Myocyte hypertrophy, disarray of
cells and myofilaments in 50 of septum,
interstitial fibrosis
63Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
- Clinical
- Young adult
- Asymptomatic,
- Sudden death (with exercise)
- Dyspnoea, angina, dizzyness, congestive failure,
atrial fibrillation, auricular thrombus, emboli,
infected endocarditis (mitral valve). - Pathogenesis Autosomal dominant (50)abnormal
sarcomeric genes beta myosin heavy chain (in one
third), cardiac troponin T, tropomyosin, myosin
binding protein C -
- Increased left ventricle wall thickness and
decreased compliance decreases volume of
ventricle (decreased stroke volume), obstructs
mitral valve, and obstructs outflow, (dilation of
congestive failure may improve function).
64Restrictive Endocarditis
- Amyloid.
- Sarcoid.
- Radiation
- Endomyocardial fibrosis Children, young
adults, Africa. Fibrosis in subendocardium and AV
valves, mural thrombi frequent, restricts
chamber inflow. ?Cause virus, malnutrition,
excess 5HT in diet (bananas, plantain).
65Heart transplantation
- 2500 transplants yearly, most for IHD and DCM, 5
year survival 60-85 - Early (d 1-10) changes
- Immediate failure surgical factors, long
ischaemia, pulmonary hypertensionhaemorrhage and
oedema - Hyperacute rejection incompatible
matchingfibrin thrombi, polymorphs - Reperfusion/ischaemia injury, (d 1-7, in
all)focal necrosis, polymorphs
66Heart transplantation
- Acute rejection, d 1-100 (Stanford
Classification) - Mild mild mononuclear infiltrate, perivascular
- Moderate Interstitial infiltrate, myocyte
necrosis - Severe Diffuse mixed infiltrate, myocyte
necrosis, haemorrhage, vasculitis - Resolving Diminished lymphocyte infiltrate,
macrophages (haemosiderin) fibroblasts - Resolved Mature focal scars
- Therapy rebiopsymild (cyclosporine), increase
therapymild (azothioprine), moderate, severe
67Pathology in Long-term Heart Transplants
- Rejectionrare after 3 months
- Graft atherosclerosis
- A) accelerated concentric narrowing of large
and small arteries - B) conventional atherosclerosis 40 in 5 years,
diffuse not focal - Cause immune mediated endothelial injury
growth factors intimal proliferation (not
related to acute rejection, age, history.
?related to steroid use, increased lipids, CMV - Myocardium Myocyte hypertrophy related to
duration of ischaemic period, Interstitial
fibrosis related to ischaemia, cyclosporine - Kidney cyclosporine interstitial fibrosis,
atrophic tubules, segmental glomerulosclerosis - Infections 60 of deaths in first year (CMV,
toxoplasmosis, 50 seroconvert) - Malignancy A) Skin basal and squamous
carcinomas, other carcinomas - B) Lymphoproliferative disorder in 10
cyclosporine treated, - EBV related, B-cell, high grade, extranodal
(brain)
68Pericardial fluid
- Effusion Non-inflammatory, low protein, few
cells. - Serous (congestive failure, hypoproteinaemia)
- Serosanguinous (trauma, resuscitation)
- Chylous (lymphatic rupture)
- Cholesterol
- Exudate Inflammatory, High protein, cells.
- Acute Serous, serofibrinous, fibrinous,
purulent, - suppurative, haemorrhagic, caseous.
- Chronic Obliterative, adhesive, constrictive.
69Acute Pericarditis
- Serous usually non-bacterial (collagen diseases,
uremia, tumour). - Serofibrinous/fibrinous (Myocardial infarct,
collagen disease, uremia, tumour, radiation less
often bacterial, viral). Fibrin resolves or
organises (adhesive pericarditis). Clinically
Friction rub, pain, systemic febrile reaction,
signs of congestive failure. - Purulent/suppurative Bacterial, mycotic,
parasitic direct spread from empyema, lobar
pneumonia, endocarditis (rarely caused by virus,
uremia, myocardial infarct. - Haemorrhagic Tuberculosis, malignancy, cardiac
surgery, (occasionally coagulopathy, bacterial
infection). - Caseous Tuberculous.
70Chronic Pericarditis
- Soldiers plaque (incidental epicardial fibrous
patch). - Obliterative pericarditis (incidental post-mortem
finding). - Adhesive mediastinopericarditis previous
suppuration, caseation, cardiac surgery,
radiation. Heart is bound to surrounding
structures. Develops marked hypertrophy. - Constrictive pericarditis Ideopathic or
following suppuration or caseation. Small quiet
heart, reduced output, congested veins, pulsus
paradoxus.
71Cardiac Tumours
- Secondary (in 5 of tumour autopsies). Primary
site Lung, breast, melanoma, lymphoma,
leukaemia. Usually asymptomatic in pericardium
(pericarditis, effusion) in myocardium
(arrhythymias, obstruction, congestive failure) - Primary (rare)
- Myxoma Most in atria, especially left (fossa
ovalis), sessile or pedunculated (may prolapse
through and obstruct valve). Effects systemic
reaction, syncope, cardiac insufficiency, sudden
death, embolism. Pathogenesis ? hamartoma, ?
organized thrombus, composed of myxoid tissue
with smooth muscle cells, macrophages
(haemosiderin) - Lipoma Polypoid tumour, may prolapse to obstruct
or may cause arrhythmias. - Papillary elastofibroma Organised thrombus with
papillary projections on valve leaflets ( Lambls
excresence is a miniature variant frequently
found at autopsy). - Rhabdomyoma muscle hamartoma, children, tuberous
sclerosis, may obstruct.
72Atheromatous Plaque, Macroscopic
- Fibrous cap (white), deeper portion (grumous,
yellow). - 3 - 15 mm diameter, raised, coalesce.
- Scanty to numerous
- Distribution Abdominal aortagt coronary gt
popliteal gt descending thoracic gtinternal carotid
gt circle of Willis. - Spared upper extremities, renal, mesenteric
(except ostia).
73Atheromatous Plaque Histology
- Fibrous cap Smooth muscle, WBC, connective
tissue, collagen, elastic, proteoglycan. - Core lipid debris, cholesterol, cholesterol
esters, foam cells ( smooth muscle and
macrophage), fibrin, plasma proteins, T-cells. - Periphery neovascularisation, chronic
inflammation.
74Effects of Atheromatous Plaque
- Different effects in narrow (coronary) and wide
(aorta) vessels - Clinically silent
- Most plaques have no effect.
- Calcification Identify on imaging.
- Complicated plaques
- Fissure
- Ulcerate atheroemboli.
- Thrombose occlude, embolise
- Haemorrhage occlude.
- Consequences
- Stenose Ischaemia, atrophy.
- Occlude (by thrombus or haemorrhage) Infarct.
- Aneurysm pressure effects, leak (rupture)
75Fatty streak
- Possible precursor of atheroma.
- Spot (1mm), Streak (1x10mm).
- Composition Macrophages filled with lipid (foam
cells) later smooth muscle cells with lipid
droplets, extracellular lipid, T-lymphocytes,
proteoglycans, collagen, elastin. - Incidence More frequent with high milk/fat diet
- 10 first decade, 30 third decade,
- May recede, persist or convert to fibrous plaque
- Distribution Aorta - unlike atheroma, Coronary
arteries - like atheroma.
76Intimal Cushion
- White areas of diffuse intimal thickening
composed of intimal smooth muscle and matrix
(little collagen, no lipid), gelatinous lesion. - Degenerate effect of blood pressure and time.
- But occur at ostia (atheroma sites).
77Monckebergs Calcific Medial Sclerosis
- Calcification of medium or small arteries
- Both sexes, over 50
- Arteries Femoral, radial, ulnar, genital.
- Cause vasotonic factors, adrenaline, nicotine.
- Effect none, visible in imaging
78Arteriolosclerosis
- Hyaline change in vessel walls.
- Pathogenesis - plasma leakage, smooth muscle
matrix. - Associations - hypertension, diabetes, age.
- Benign - hyaline narrowing.
- Hyperplastic - onion skin (fibrinoid necrosis).
- Sites Kidney, gall bladder, intestine,
periadrenal, pancreatic.
79Atherosclerosis Risk Factors
- Hyperlipidemia. LDL.
- Hypertension 160/95 Vs 140/90,- Risk X 5.
Increases Atheroma, IHD, CVD. Risk decreases
with therapy. - Cigarettes More AS, more sudden death, Risk
increased by 70-200. Decreases after cessation. - Diabetes More AS, MI x 2, Increased CVD, PVD
risk increased x 8-150. - Other Physical activity, stress, obesity, oral
contraceptives, hyperuricemia, high CHO intake,
male, age, family history, homocystinemia. - Multiple Factors More than additive.
80Theories of Atherogenesis
- Virchow - imbibation
- Rokitansky - encrustation
81Role of lipid in Atherosclerosis
- 1. Found in plaque
- 2. Experimentally raised lipid -gt AS
- 3. Hyperlipidemias -gt AS
- 4. Populations with high lipids -gt high AS rate
- 5. Treat hyperlipidemia - decrease AS.
82Risk of Atherosclerosis
- High Raised LDL (70 cholesterol), triglyceride
and VLDL. - Low Raised HDL.
- Risk increases with increased cholesterol level
(risk x 5 with cholesterol increase 220 to 265) - Increased intake cholesterol and triglycerides -
increases serum cholesterol. - Omega 3 fatty acids (fish) protective
83How Hyperlipidemia may damage intima
- More serum LDL, more cellular penetration.
- LDL with proteoglycan - avid uptake.
- LDL modified - lysosomal uptake.
- LDL - directly damages endothelial cell.
- Oxidised lipoproteins Endothelial injury, smooth
muscle injury, foam cells - scavenger receptor,
chemotactic.
84Intimal dysfunction
- Cause Mechanical, Haemodynamic stress, Immune
complex, Radiation, Chemotherapy. - Association Hypertension, Stress, Cigarettes.
- Effect Increased intimal permeability, adhesion,
smooth muscle proliferation, atheroma (if
hyperlipidemia )
85Macrophage
- Family Monocyte, histiocyte, macrophage,
epithelioid cell, giant cell, granuloma - Monocytes adhere, migrate, phagocytose
- Have scavenger receptor - modified VLDL receptor
(Lipid internalised, hydrolysed, esterified -gt
lipid droplet). - Monocytes produce IL-1, TNF (increased
adhesion), chemotaxis factors, toxic O2, PDGF,
TGF beta -gt smooth muscle
86Smooth muscle proliferation
- Origin From media (or myointima)
- Stimulus PDGF (from platelets, macrophages,
endothelial and smooth muscle cells), FGF, EGF,
TGF. - Inhibit Heparin, TGF-B.
- Result Smooth muscle cells produce
extracellular matrix and foam cells (atheroma)
87Arterial Injury
- Permeability increases.
- Adhesion of platelets, monocytes
- Factors released
- Smooth muscle migrates to intima, proliferates
and produces extracellular matrix, collagen,
elastin, proteoglycans - Monocytes - phagocytose
- Lipid deposited
88Other Theories of Atherogenesis
- Primary smooth muscle proliferation monoclonal
growth (as a form of leiomyoma) - Cause Exogenous (hydrocarbon, virus), endogenous
(cholesterol) - Experimentally Plaques in Marek chicken virus,
anthracycline, herpes mRNA in plaque
89Aneurysms
- Localised abnormal dilation of vessel.
- Types Saccular, fusiform, cylindroid,
dissection. - Complications Pressure, thrombus, rupture.
- Aetiology Atherosclerosis, cystic medial
necrosis, syphilis, trauma (arteriovenous
aneurysm), PAN, infections, (mycotic), congenital
(berry).
90Atherosclerotic Aneurysm
- Males of 50, frequently (50) hypertensive
- Abdominal aorta (between renal artery and aortic
biforcation). (Thoracic aorta, renal, mesenteric
arteries) - Complications
- Rupture (if gt6 cm, 50 rupture in 10 years)
- surgical mortality 50 (unruptured 5)
- Compression - ureter, vertebrae
- Occlusion (thrombus, pressure)
- Embolism
- Abdominal mass
91Syphilis
- Obliterative endarteritis of vasa vasorum
- Medial destruction with fibrosis (causes tree
barking or wrinkling of intima and dilation of
vessel). Aortic valve dilated with rolled
thickened cusps - Secondary atherosclerosis usual
- Complications
- Mediastinal encroachment
- Respiratory effects in lung and airway
- Swallowing impairment
- Cough (recurrent laryngeal nerve)
- Pain (involvement of vertebrae and ribs)
- Cardiac effects
92Dissecting Haematoma (Aneurysm)
- Males x 3 , aged 40 to 60, Females often young,
pregnant and hypertensive. - Haematoma between middle and outer 1/3 of vessel
enters through 4-5 cm transverse intimal tear. - Type A - Within 10cm of aortic valve.
- Type B - Distal to subclavical artery.
- Haematoma dissects proximal, distal or reenters
lumen. - Pain - back, radiates progressively.
- Rupture into pericardial, pleural or
peritoneal cavity. - Narrowing of vessels - cerebral or coronary
insufficiency.
93Dissecting Haematoma (Aneurysm)
- Cause Hypertension - mechanical stress
- Cystic medial necrosis basophlic mucoid pools
with fragmented elastic, abnormal collagen,
elastin, proteoglycan - Marfan, abnormal collagen cross links.
Structural effects in retina, lens, joint, aorta,
abnormal height - Therapy Surgery, hypotensive therapy.
94Arteritis
- Arteritis (vasculitis, angiitis).
- Cause Bacterial, irradiation, toxin, trauma,
collagen disease. - Immune pathogenesis
- Resemble arthus phenomenon, serum sickness
(immune complex disorders) - Found in SLE, Mixed cryoglobulinemia(IgG,M,Comple
ment) - Virus Ag/Ab complex, IgGC. HBsAg-antibody
complex - Drugs
- Cytotoxic Ab to endothelial cells (SLE) to
activated endothelial cells (Kawasaki) - c-ANCA (PAN, Wegeners), p-ANCA (microscopic PAN,
Churg Strauss) - T cells granulomas cell mediated immunity
95Arteritis
- Periarteritis nodosa (PAN)
- Leukocytoclastic vasculitis
- Temporal arteritis
- Wegeners granulomatosis
- Allergic granulomatosis
- Lymphomatoid granulomatosis
- Raynauds
- Buergers
- Takayasus
- Kawasakis
96Periarteritis Nodosa, Pathology
- Classic type involves medium or small vessels
(except lung). - Kidney 85, heart 75, liver 65, GI 50 (also
pancreas, testes, skeletal muscle, skin).
- Involves sharply localised segments of vessels
especially branching points. - Stages (may coexist)
- Acute - fibrinoid necrosis (of segments),
leukocytes, aneurysm formation, thrombus. - Healing - fibroblastic reaction - nodules,
macrophages, plasma cells, organised thrombus - Healed - fibrotic (elastic stains).
97Periarteritis Nodosa, Clinical
- Ill young adult, (male x 3), fever, malaise,
weak, raised WCC, PUO, weight loss. - Renal failure, haematuria, hypertension,
albuminuria. - Abdominal pain, melaena.
- Muscle aches and pains, peripheral neuritis.
- Investigate Hepatitis B Ag 30, ANCA,
Arteriography - nodules (aneurysms) - Biopsy Kidney, skin.
- Therapy Steroid and cyclophosphamide cure 90.
98Temporal arteritis
- Granulomatous inflammation of small and medium
sized cranial arteries - Morphology giant cell reaction to fragmented
elastic in vessel wall with polys and
lymphocytes. Later thrombus formation and intimal
fibrosis. Segmental involvement biopsy is
negative in 40. - Clinical aged, female, high ESR, headache, local
tenderness, facial pain, visual loss (40). May
involve aortic arch, GI tract, myocardium, CNS - Association polymyalgia rheumatica (flu-like
illness with muscle stiffness. - Cause ? Cell mediated immunity to arterial
antigen. - Responds to steroids
99Wegeners Granulomatosis
- Acute necrotising granulomatous inflammation of
upper and lower respiratory tract with focal
necrotising vasculitis. - Glomerulonephritis focal necrotising
glomerulitis, diffuse proliferative or cresentic
GN. - Clinical males in 5th decade
- 95 pneumonitis with nodular or cavitating
infiltrate - 90 chronic sinusitis
- 75 mucosal ulceration of nasopharnyx
- 80 renal disease
- Also skin rash, muscle pain, articular
lesions. - 80 die in one year without treatment. 90
respond to cyclophosphamide - Pathogenesis ANCA, Occasionally immune complexes
found, cell mediated immunity role.
100Raynaud
- Raynauds Disease.
- Vasospastic disorder of young women, onset
cold, emotion. - Involves fingers, hands, nose and feet which
become white, blue and red. - Benign Secondary arterial thickening, tropic
skin changes (atrophy, ulcers). - Raynauds phenomenon.
- Vasospastic changes in extremities due to
- Atherosclerosis, connective tissue diseases,
Buergers disease, cryoglobulinemia, myeloma,
poisoning with ergot or lead, primary pulmonary
hypertension, systemic sclerosis.
101Buergers Disease (Migratory Thrombophlebitis)
- Segmental thrombotic acute chronic inflammation
of intermediate and small vessels (arteries,
veins and nerves) - Endothelial sensitivity or toxicity to tobacco,
catechol amines, collagen II III
hypersensitivity, HLA 9, B5 - Involves males, strong association with tobacco
smoking, mainly in Europe, North America - Pain, vascular insufficiency of lower limbs -
gangrene, Raynaud phenomenon
102Varicose Veins
- Dilated tortous veins (legs, portal
system),female, fat, familial, increase with age - Aetiology Posture, pregnancy, tumours, poor
support (superficial veins surrounded by fat) - Pathology Valves distorted and damaged, vein
elastica degeneration and calcification and
fibrosis (phlebosclerosis), luminal thrombus - Effect Leg congestion, oedema, heavyness, pain,
stasis dermatitis, tropic changes, ulcer
103Thrombophlebitis (Deep venous thrombosis)
- Predisposition CCF, cancer, pregnancy,
bed-rest, immobilisation, post-operative. - Effects
- Local Deep leg veins (periprostatic, pelvis)
inflamed - oedema, dilated surrounding veins,
dusky cyanosis, pain on pressure or dorsiflexion. - Asymptomatic.
- Pulmonary embolism.
- Diagnose ultrasound, pletysmography, I128,
angiography - Prophylaxis Exercise, anticoagulate.
104Venous thrombosis
- Other sites of venous thrombosis
- Skull sinus thrombosis following meningitis or
respiratory sinus infection. - Portal vein thrombosis following peritonitis,
appendicitis. - Phlegmasia alba dolens (milk leg) ileofemoral
thrombophlebitis with lymphatic involvement
during third trimester. - Migratory thrombophlebitis Carcinoma of
pancreas, lung, colon.
105Lymphatics
- Inflammation Lymphangitis, lymphadenitis
- Obstruction tumour, surgery, radiation,
inflammation, filiariasis. Results in oedema with
fibrosis, brawny induration, peau dorange,
ulceration. - Leak chylothorax, chylous ascites.
- Lymphoedema praecox Females 10-25 years, lower
limb. ? cause - Milroys disease Lymphoedema from birth,
mendelian, abnormal lymphatics. - Congenital lymphoedema Similar sporadic, not
mendelian
106Vascular Tumours
- Haemangioma, benign. capillary, cavernous,
granuloma pyogenicum, Lindau von Hipple glomus,
telangiectasia, spider naevus, naevus flammeus
(simple birthmark). port-wine stain (disfiguring
birthmark), Sturge Weber, Osler Weber Rendau - Malignant.
- Haemangioendothelioma Skin (spleen, liver), low
grade malignancy. - Epithelioid soft tissue, lung - 20 metastasise.
- Haemangiopericytoma lower extremites,
retroperitoneal - 50 metastasise - Angiosarcoma Skin, soft tissue, breast, liver
(arsenic, thorotrast, PVC) . High grade
malignancy - Kaposis sarcoma immune deficiency, herpes virus