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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A hypothesis for vulnerable plaque rupture due to stress-induced debonding around cellular microcalcifications in thin fibrous caps

TLDR
The mathematical model predicts that inclusions located in an area of high circumferential stress in the cap can intensify this stress to nearly 600 kPa when the cap thickness is <65 μm, and the most likely candidates for the inclusions are either calcified macrophages or smooth muscle cells that have undergone apoptosis.
Abstract
In this article, we advance a hypothesis for the rupture of thin fibrous cap atheroma, namely that minute (10-μm-diameter) cellular-level microcalcifications in the cap, which heretofore have gone undetected because they lie below the visibility of current in vivo imaging techniques, cause local stress concentrations that lead to interfacial debonding. New theoretical solutions are presented for the local stress concentration around these minute spherical inclusions that predict a nearly 2-fold increase in interfacial stress that is relatively insensitive to the location of the hypothesized microinclusions in the cap. To experimentally confirm the existence of the hypothesized cellular-level microcalcifications, we examined autopsy specimens of coronary atheromatous lesions using in vitro imaging techniques whose resolution far exceeds conventional magnetic resonance imaging, intravascular ultrasound, and optical coherence tomography approaches. These high-resolution imaging modalities, which include confocal microscopy with calcium-specific staining and micro-computed tomography imaging, provide images of cellular-level calcifications within the cap proper. As anticipated, the minute inclusions in the cap are very rare compared with the numerous calcified macrophages observed in the necrotic core. Our mathematical model predicts that inclusions located in an area of high circumferential stress (>300 kPa) in the cap can intensify this stress to nearly 600 kPa when the cap thickness is <65 μm. The most likely candidates for the inclusions are either calcified macrophages or smooth muscle cells that have undergone apoptosis.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Concept of Vulnerable/Unstable Plaque

TL;DR: Advancing the field will require establishing relevant translational animal models that produce vulnerable plaques at risk for rupture and further testing of these modalities in large prospective clinical trials, including optical coherence tomography, high-resolution MRI, molecular biomarkers, and other techniques.
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Vascular Calcification Pathobiology of a Multifaceted Disease

TL;DR: Clinically, vascular calcification is now accepted as a valuable predictor of coronary heart disease, and, conversely, many treatments for cardiovascular disease such as statins, antioxidants, hormone replacement therapy, ACE inhibitors, fish oils, and calcium channel blockers may affect bone health.
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Update on acute coronary syndromes: the pathologists' view

TL;DR: In order to further the understanding of the specific biological events which trigger plaque instability and as well as to monitor the effects of novel anti-atherosclerotic therapies newer imaging modalities in vivo are needed.
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Osteogenesis Associates With Inflammation in Early-Stage Atherosclerosis Evaluated by Molecular Imaging In Vivo

TL;DR: This serial in vivo study demonstrates the real-time association of macrophage burden with osteogenic activity in early-stage atherosclerosis and offers a cellular-resolution tool to identify preclinical microcalcifications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular bases of the acute coronary syndromes

TL;DR: In the latter half of this century, the advent of coronary arteriography permitted definition in the living patient of coronary stenoses due to atherosclerosis, which allowed the development of rational treatment modalities such as coronary artery bypass surgery and percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty as discussed by the authors.
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Coronary Risk Factors and Plaque Morphology in Men with Coronary Disease Who Died Suddenly

TL;DR: Among men with coronary disease who die suddenly, abnormal serum cholesterol concentrations - particularly elevated ratios of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol - predispose patients to rupture of vulnerable plaques, whereas cigarette smoking predisposes patients to acute thrombosis.
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Distribution of circumferential stress in ruptured and stable atherosclerotic lesions. A structural analysis with histopathological correlation.

TL;DR: Data suggest that concentrations of circumferential tensile stress in the atherosclerotic plaque may play an important role in plaque rupture and myocardial infarction, however, plaque rupture may not always occur at the region of highest stress, suggesting that local variations in plaque material properties contribute to plaque rupture.
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Effects of fibrous cap thickness on peak circumferential stress in model atherosclerotic vessels.

TL;DR: This study examined peak circumferential stress of atherosclerotic lesions by using finite element analysis based on idealized two-dimensional cross sections of diseased vessels similar to intravascular ultrasound images to test the hypothesis that subintimal plaque structural features such as thickness of the fibrous cap are more important in the distribution of stress in the plaque than stenosis severity.
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The Impact of Calcification on the Biomechanical Stability of Atherosclerotic Plaques

TL;DR: Calcification does not increase fibrous cap stress in typical ruptured or stable human coronary atherosclerotic lesions, and does not seem to decrease the mechanical stability of the coronary atheroma.
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