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CARDIOVASCULAR PATHOLOGY. Tutorial I William H. Luer M.D. TOPICS. Aneurysms Embolism Vasculitides Myocardial Infarction Diseases of Veins & Lymphatics. ANEURYSM. An abnormal dilatation of an artery or vein Caused by weakened vessel wall from: Congenital defect Systemic disease
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CARDIOVASCULAR PATHOLOGY Tutorial I William H. Luer M.D.
TOPICS • Aneurysms • Embolism • Vasculitides • Myocardial Infarction • Diseases of Veins & Lymphatics
ANEURYSM • An abnormal dilatation of an artery or vein • Caused by weakened vessel wall from: Congenital defect Systemic disease Atherosclerosis Infection Trauma
SHAPES OF ANEURYSMS • Saccular • Fusiform • Cylindroid • Berry
ATHEROSCLEROTIC ANEURYSM • Atherosclerosis is the most common cause of aortic aneurysm • Most frequently occur in males, >50 years of age • Most occur in abdominal aorta, below the renal arteries • Complications include thrombosis, embolism, and rupture
Aorta Aneurysm with thrombus Kidney Kidney Atherosclerotic Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
SYPHILITIC ANEURYSM • Seen in tertiary stage of syphilis with obliterative endarteritis of vasa vasorum and aortitis • Roughening of intima: “Tree barking” • Involves the thoracic aorta • Complications include rupture, aortic insufficiency, and narrowing of coronary ostia
Aortic Valve Aneurysm Syphilitic Aneurysm – Ascending Arch of Aorta
MYCOTIC ANEURYSM • Bacterial infection weakens vessel wall • Associated with sepsis, bacterial endocarditis • May involve aorta or cerebral, renal, mesenteric, and splenic arteries
BERRY ANEURYSM • Involve cerebral arteries at bifurcations • Probably arise at congenital points of weakness in wall • Can rupture and result in subarachnoid hemorrhage • Clinically may see headache, stiff neck (meningeal irritation) and death
DISSECTING ANEURYSM • Entry of blood into substance of wall & extension along the length of the vessel • Actually a form of hematoma, hence also called dissecting hematoma • Male > female • Associated with hypertension
DISSECTING ANEURYSM (CONT.) • Usually have tear in media where blood enters the wall & blood can reenter lumen through a second tear • Blood dissects in media as outer third & inner third of media separates • May be associated with cystic medial necrosis with loss of elastic and smooth muscle fibers • Can be seen in Marfan’s syndrome
Dissection Aorta Aortic Valve Ascending Aorta – Dissecting Aneurysm
PSEUDOANEURYSM • Injury to wall of vessel allows blood to escape from vessel into adjacent tissue • Extravasated blood coagulates and becomes a mass along side the vessel • This mass of blood (hematoma) gives the impression that there is an aneurysm
Brachial artery Pseudoaneurysm with blood clot Axillary fat Axilla –Pseudoaneurysm, stab wound severed brachial artery
EMBOLISM • The occlusion of a vessel by an object, the embolus, that has been transported to the site of occlusion, through the cardiovascular system.
TYPES OF EMBOLI • Thromboemboli • Bone marrow emboli • Fat emboli • Air emboli • Amniotic fluid emboli • Foreign body emboli
PULMONARY EMBOLISM (PE) • Cause of death in about 100,000 people per year in USA • Number 3 killer in USA, behind heart disease and cancer • Emboli travel to lungs and lodge in pulmonary arteries • Emboli usually from thrombi in deep veins of legs • Leg thrombosis common, found in 10-65% of autopsies on hospitalized patients
VENOUS THROMBOSIS & PE ESPECIALLY COMMON IN: • Prolonged bed rest • Immobilization of extremity • Congestive heart failure (CHF) • Following trauma, burns, fractures, surgery • During & after parturition • Disseminated cancer
PE • PE often unsuspected • Death may follow a large embolic event in seconds • If not fatal, PE may or may not cause an infarct • Consequences depend on size & number of emboli & the state of the circulation
CASE OF FATAL PE • The following two photographs are from an autopsy performed on a 66 year old female who died suddenly on the second day after an open lung biopsy • She died as she was being moved from her bed (where she had been since surgery) to a chair • The cause of death was PE • The predisposing causes include surgery and immobilization during bed rest
CASE OF PULMONARY INFARCT • Next photograph is from an elderly male in congestive heart failure • He experienced sudden pleuritic chest pain followed by hemoptysis
Pulmonary infarct with hemorrhage Embolus Lung Lung – Pulmonary Infarct
CASE OF RECURRENT PE • The next photograph is from an 86 year old male with chronic renal failure and bilateral deep vein thrombosis • He was experiencing recurrent pulmonary emboli • A filter was placed in the inferior vena cava to catch the emboli before they reached the lungs
VASCULITIS • Inflammation & often necrosis of blood vessels • May be the predominant or sole manifestation of a disease or only on component of a disease • May induce tissue ischemia
VASCULITIDES • Polyarteritis nodosa • Allergic granulomatosis of Churg & Strauss • Kawasaki’s disease • Hypersensitivity vasculitis • Giant cell arteritis (Temporal arteritis) • Takayasu’s arteritis • Buerger’s disease • Wegener’s granulomatosis
POLYARTERITIS NODOSA (PN) • Systemic necrotizing vasculitis • Segmental involvement of small & medium sized muscular arteries • Often leads to microaneurysms • Widespread ischemic damage • Vascular lesions at different stages of evolution • Probably due to immunologic disorder since see Ig & C in lesions & about 30% of cases have Hepatitis B antigenemia and have + p-ANCA: perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies
PN CLINICAL • Male > Female • Erratic multisystem involvement, may see tender muscles, skin lesions, subcutaneous nodules, malaise, fever, weight loss, high blood pressure, hematuria, abdominal pain, diarrhea, melena • May be acute or chronic with recurrences • Renal involvement may be prominent & often cause of death with hematuria, albuminuria, and hypertension • Treat with immunosuppression
ALLERGIC GRANULOMATOSIS OF CHURG &STAUSS • Vascular lesions resemble PN but involve vessels in lung (in contrast to PN) • Related to allergy, esp. asthma • See peripheral eosinophilia & eosinophils in vascular lesions • Probably a hypersensitivity disorder
KAWASAKI’S DISEASE • Most have heart involvement • See necrotizing vasculitis of coronary arteries (lesions resemble PN) • May see thrombosis, aneurysm, and myocardial infarction • Possible viral etiology
HYPERSENSITIVITY VASCULITIS (HV) • Involves post-capillary venules, mostly in skin to produce palpable purpura, can affect internal organs and tissues • Mediated by immune complex deposition, Type III hypersensitivity • Causes include drugs: penicillin, sulfonamides bacterial: beta hemolytic Streptococcus endogenous antigen Hepatitis B antigen
HV: PATHOLOGY • Leukocytoclastic vasculitis, features are: fibrinoid necrosis of vascular wall extravasation of red blood cells nuclear dust from PMN breakdown • Vascular lesions all about same stage • Can resolve, recur, or become chronic
GIANT CELL ARTERITIS (GCA) • Also called temporal arteritis • Female>Male, usually >50 years of age • Typically involves temporal artery, but may involve other medium to large sized arteries, but rarely renal (in contrast to PN) • Possible autoimmune reaction to elastic fibers in vessel wall
GCA: PATHOLOGY • Full thickness granulomatous inflammation of vessel wall • Destruction of elastic lamina • Thrombosis & fibrosis • Can have “skip areas” in affected vessel, where inflammation is lacking
GCA: CLINICAL • Weakness, malaise, fever, weight loss, headache • Can become chronic, usually resolves • Can affect sight if involves ocular vessels
TAKAYASU’S ARTERITIS • Female>Male, young • Decreased pulses in upper extremities, ischemia of upper body • Etiology unknown • Adventitial inflammation, that moves inward to involve full thickness of vessel, may see thrombosis & scarring • Aortic arch may show irregular thickening and stenosis
BUERGER’S DISEASE • Also called thromboangitis obliterans • Related to cigarette smoking, 25-50 year olds • Involves radial & tibial arteries and adjacent nerves and veins • See thrombosis, organization, recanalization, microabscess, granulomas, & fibrosis of vascular bundle • In extremities get pain, ischemia, ulcers, & gangrene
WEGENER’S GRANULOMATOSIS • Necrotizing vasculitis, esp. in lung, kidney, and spleen • Acute necrotizing granulomatous lesions in lung, and in nasal & oral cavities • Proliferative glomerulonephritis • See cytoplasmic diffuse antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (c-ANCA) • 90% remission with cytotoxic treatment
“NAME THAT VASCULITIS” • Test your vasculitis knowledge • The next slide will give a characteristic(s) of one of the vasculitides • Name the vasculitis from the information given • The slide after will name the vasculitis • Good Luck
CHARACTERISTIC • Affects post capillary venules in skin producing a palpable purpura
ANSWER • Hypersensitivity (Leukocytoclastic) Vasculitis
CHARACTERISTIC • Facial pain, headache, fever, fatigue, weight loss, in an elderly female
ANSWER • Giant Cell (Temporal) Arteritis
CHARACTERISTIC • Gastrointestinal bleeding • Renal failure • Fever • + p-ANCA (perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody) • Vessel biopsy: transmural necrotizing acute inflammation of vessel wall
ANSWER • Polyarteritis Nodosa
CHARACTERISTICS • Necrotizing granulomas in respiratory tract • Necrotizing granulomatous vasculitis in lungs • Necrotizing cresentric glomerulonephritis • + c-ANCA (cytoplasmic diffuse anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody)
ANSWER • Wegener’s Granulomatosis