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1 From the Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans.
2 Presented at the symposium Fat Intake During Childhood, held in Houston, June 89, 1998. 3 Address correspondence to HC Stary, LSU Medical Center, 1901 Perdido Street, New Orleans, LA 70112. E-mail: hstary{at}lsumc.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: Infants children young adults coronary arteries atherogenesis thrombosis lipid regression calcium deposits atheroma preatheroma foam cells
| INTRODUCTION |
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Although advanced histologic techniques are very time consuming when used in large-scale population studies, my laboratory nevertheless chose to use such techniques in a systematic study of coronary arteries and aortas to try to clarify these questions. Overall, this part of our study included the coronary arteries of 691 persons (and the aortas of 648 of the 691 cases), whose ages spanned the first 4 decades of life (ie, from full-term birth to 39 y) and who mostly died suddenly of causes other than disease.
The methods we used were described in other publications (13). Briefly, the improvements made over other studies included preserving the structure of the coronary arteries as it had been in life (or close to it) by perfusing and fixing the arteries with glutaraldehyde under physiologic (or near physiologic) pressure rather than examining the arteries as they collapsed and contracted after death. We then prepared entire cross-sections of the pressure-perfused arteries of 691 cases at a thickness of only 1 µm. The 1-µm thick sections revealed much higher resolution of structure and composition by light microscopy than do conventional 56-µm thick sections. Additional detail of selected smaller regions or cells was obtained by electron microscopy. Histologic processing of aortas (4) was similar to that of coronary arteries except that aortas were opened and fixed flat by immersion in formalin rather than by pressure-perfusion fixing in glutaraldehyde.
The segments of arteries we sectioned and evaluated in every case included the highly susceptible locations of coronary arteries and aortas in which atheromas predictably make their first appearance in young adults with such lesions. We characterized the intima and lesions in these precisely defined locations in infants and children and then studied the same sites in adolescents and young and middle-aged adults. Multiple 1-µm thick cross-sections from along the highly susceptible segments enabled us to reconstruct the three-dimensional structures and compositions of these segments and of the changes and lesions they contained.
We found that the intima was thicker in highly susceptible locations from birth and that macrophages containing lipid droplets (macrophage foam cells) and other changes developed more strongly in these than in other locations. The various terms that have been applied to the thicker intima segments are listed in Table 1
. The contiguous nature of the histologic changes and the time of life at which a specific change predominates indicate that each represents a gradation or stage in a temporal sequence. The characteristic histologic changes were therefore arranged as a numbered sequence of lesion types. Shown in Figure 1
is an overview of the sequence and a comparison with the more limited conventional classification developed mainly by viewing arteries with the unaided eye.
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Histologically advanced atherosclerotic lesions are classified as types IV, V, VI, VII, and VIII. By histologic criteria, atherosclerotic lesions are considered advanced when the structure of the intima is disorganized and changes in the outer or inner contour of the arterial segment are present. Type IV lesions, which begin to appear in the second half of the second decade of life, may narrow the arterial lumen only minimally and may not be visible by angiography. However, type IV lesions can become clinically overt by developing a fissure at their surface, a hematoma, or a thrombus. The sequence of changes that produce a type IV lesion and the sequences that may follow once a type IV lesion is present are shown in Figure 2
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| ADAPTIVE THICKENING AND ARTERIAL SITES SUSCEPTIBLE TO LIPID ACCUMULATION |
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In cross-sections of a properly distended medium-sized vessel such as a coronary or carotid artery, adaptive thickening appears as a crescent-shaped eccentric increase in the thickness of the outer wall of a bifurcation. The thickest part of the intima may be as much as twice as thick as the media from the time of infancy but, in the coronary arteries, considerable individual variation in degree has been found (1).
From the initial appearance of minimal lipid and macrophage foam cell accumulations in early life, the accumulations are more prominent in a subset of adaptive intimal thickenings. The sites also contain more albumin and fibrinogen. The fluid mechanical forces in these regions give rise to adaptive thickening and also independently enhance the influx of plasma proteins. A distinct fluid mechanical force in such locations is low shear stress (8, 9). In regions of low shear, circulating plasma particles are in longer contact with the endothelial surface. This enhances the frequency with which particles enter the intima. When plasma is too rich in lipoprotein, it accumulates most in these locations. If atheromas are present in later life, they are found here first.
Because the degree and precise nature of the fluid mechanical forces vary for different arteries and different segments and regions of arteries, the rate at which lipid influx (and in hyperlipidemia, lipid accumulation) occurs also varies. Simplified, 3 degrees of susceptibility to lipid influx, accumulation, and lesion formation can be distinguished:
The nature and significance of adaptive intimal thickening have been disputed. Some authors view adaptive thickening as atherosclerosis because it is present where atheromas are typically found, because it is mostly circumscribed and eccentric, and because it projects into the lumen of vessels when these are collapsed after death. Others have speculated that adaptive thickening, although not a lesion itself, is a prerequisite for retention and accumulation of lipid and thus for lesion formation. Neither assumption is likely because when atherogenic lipoprotein concentrations are extremely high, macrophage foam cells and lipid do accumulate and advanced lesions do develop also at locations without adaptive thickening.
| MACROPHAGE FOAM CELLS IN INFANTS |
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We designated such minimal changes as type I lesions. The segments in which we found type I lesions in the coronary arteries were the highly susceptible locations discussed earlier. Most type I lesions are not visible to the unaided eye. Although such minimal changes are most frequent in infants (in our studies) or in intrauterine life (10), we also found them in older children and adults, particularly in the moderately susceptible locations of arteries (highly susceptible segments may then have more than minimal changes).
In the population we studied, 38% of infants who were <2 full years old had type I lesions in their coronary arteries. The incidence was greatest (50% of infants) in the first 6 mo after birth. The incidence declined in young children after infancy but then increased again in older children (Figure 3
). Because our regression studies showed that most macrophage foam cells have a maximum life span of 6 mo (see the section "Regression and prevention of progression"), it is possible that the type I changes we found in the first 6 mo of life had formed in fetal life and may reflect risk factors of the mother. However, when found in children beyond infancy, lipid accumulations should reflect a child's own constitution or nutrition.
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| MACROPHAGE FOAM CELL ACCUMULATIONS TYPICAL AROUND PUBERTY |
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The locations in the arterial tree in which type II lesions develop include the highly susceptible locations in which the symptom-producing lesions of adults are found. We discovered that macrophage foam cell accumulations at the highly susceptible sites contain more foam cells than do other locations but that, because such intimal segments are normally thicker, foam cells accumulate at a greater depth and their lipid may not be visible when only the surface is examined.
| LINK BETWEEN MINIMAL AND ADVANCED DISEASE: FORMATION OF EXTRACELLULAR LIPID POOLS |
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Several reasons account for such skepticism. According to the traditional view of minimal and advanced lesions, they differ too greatly from each other both histologically and grossly, and a precise topographic correspondence between the 2 types of lesions appeared to be lacking; furthermore, some older individuals had many minimal lesions but no advanced lesions whereas others had many advanced lesions but few that were minimal.
The apparent lack of conformity between locations with minimal accumulations and those with atheromas is, in part, the consequence of relying on the unaided eye to evaluate blood vessels. This means of examination often cannot reveal accumulations (and can never reveal that more foam cells are present) at the highly susceptible locations where atheromas develop.
The evidence that there is in fact a strong correlation between the locations with minimal accumulations containing more foam cells in children and the sites of atheromas of adults comes from extensive studies of 1-µm thick sections of lesions (2, 3). As discussed previously, wherever the proteoglycan-rich layer of the intima is thick, foam cells accumulate in the deeper parts and the upper intima may remain foam cell free. In contrast, when the intima is thin, foam cells are, of necessity, confined to the narrow space immediately below the endothelial cell surface. Thus, the lipid of foam cells can be seen through the intimal surface when the intima is thin but not when it is thick, even though thick segments contain more foam cells. Thick intimal segments (with or without initial foam cells) are not thick enough to be seen as raised plaques, although they may be visible as a gray-white patch.
There are no insurmountable differences between the morphologies of minimal and advanced lesions when the nature of the intima at sites where advanced lesions tend to develop is considered. Highly susceptible locations of the intima always contain layers of smooth muscle cells, which are cells that have been considered a product of advanced disease. The observations that small pools of extracellular lipid at such locations may follow or accompany foam cell accumulations and that pools may enlarge and fuse to form a lipid core provide the necessary link between minimal and advanced lesions. A lack of the correct combination of factors, such as the concentration of plasma lipoproteins, blood pressure, and fluid mechanical forces, may explain why many minimal accumulations reach a point of equilibrium beyond which they do not progress.
| ATHEROMA: THE ADVANCED LESION OF YOUNG ADULTS |
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Thus, the compositions of extracellular accumulations of type III and IV lesions are identical except that lipid cores almost always also contain cholesterol crystals and calcium particles whereas the lipid pools of type III lesions rarely do. Smooth muscle cells normally resident in the region of the lipid core are decreased and sometimes absent. The packed particles and droplets that replace the normal intercellular matrix at the core presumably hinder the function and existence of the smooth muscle cells of this region. Any remaining smooth muscle cells become widely dispersed and have attenuated and elongated cell bodies and often unusually thick basement membranes. The cell organelles may be calcified and calcium particles of variable size and extent may also be found within the extracellular lipid of a core (see the section "Calcium deposits").
At the developmental stage designated a type IV lesion, the thickness of the tissue layer overlying the core does not substantially exceed the usual thickness of the intima at that location. The layer is composed of a proteoglycan-rich intercellular matrix, smooth muscle cells with and without lipid droplet inclusions, macrophages, and macrophage foam cells. Lymphocytes are also present, and their proportion to macrophages may be much increased compared with their proportions in lesion types II and III. Components such as newly formed fibrous connective tissue layers, surface disruption, hematomas, or thrombosis are not part of type IV lesions. However, once type IV lesions have formed, any of these components may then develop relatively readily.
| ADVANCED LESIONS WITH A LARGE PROPORTION OF REPARATIVE FIBROUS CONNECTIVE TISSUE |
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Generally, layers of fibrous connective tissue are added in the years or decades after atheromas form. The resulting morphology is referred to as the type V (fibroatheroma) lesion. Intimal smooth muscle cells, which may themselves be greatly increased in number, produce the new fibrous tissue. Various stimuli account for the different degrees of intercellular fibrous matrix production by the smooth muscle cells. Disruption of vascular wall structure by the accumulated and compacted extracellular lipid appears to induce a relatively sluggish response whereas a marked increase in smooth muscle cells and fibrous tissue follows thrombosis (as discussed in the next section).
Some older adults have lesions consisting mainly of fibrous connective tissue that is sometimes hyalinized. Lipid cores are absent, other accumulated lipid is minimal, and sometimes there is apparently no lipid at all. Such lesions may be designated type VIII (fibrotic) lesions. Fibrotic lesions may be the result of one or more processes, including organization of thrombus, extension of the fibrous component of an adjacent fibroatheroma, and resorption (regression) of lipid cores.
Type VIII lesions must not be confused with focal and eccentric adaptive thickenings. The smooth muscle cells and fibrous connective tissue matrix of type VIII lesions have the characteristics of reparative reactions, whereas adaptive thickening has a predictably harmonious structure with smooth muscle cells present in normal proportions (7).
| THROMBOTIC DEPOSITS |
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When fissures of the lesion surface are only microscopic in size, the associated hematomas and surface thrombi are also small. Small thrombotic deposits, often composed only of fibrin, are also found in the absence of detectable disruption of the underlying lesion surface. Presumably, a succession of such deposits leads to incremental fibrous thickening of the underlying lesion, but at a rate that (although faster than lipid accumulation alone) is so gradual as to take decades before blood flow is severely obstructed.
Fibrin or fibrinogen accumulations forming a morphologic pattern suggesting the remnants of thrombi may be identified by immunohistochemistry on or within some lesions. We found this presumed evidence of earlier thrombosis in young and middle-aged adults in association mainly with some lesions of types IV to VI (5).
It has been proposed that platelet or fibrin deposits on the intima could be the initial event in atherogenesis (25, 26). We did not find platelet deposits or fibrin accumulations suggesting thrombosis on intima we considered normal. However, diffuse fibrinogen that does not suggest thrombi or their remnants can often be identified in adaptive intimal thickening and in lesions. The effect, if any, of this fibrinogen on the arterial wall or on lesion progression is not known.
| CALCIUM DEPOSITS |
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5 to
10 µm. Smooth muscle cells containing the granules were mainly cells trapped in the lipid cores of lesionscells that had become dispersed, isolated, and encased among the vast masses of accumulated extracellular lipid. Smooth muscle cells existing in a so severely altered environment can be presumed not to function normally and often to be agonal. We did not recognize the precise nature of the (altered) calcified organelles because of the particles or crystals that were superimposed on the organelles. Mitochondria have often been suspected in studies of other conditions but it is likely that other organelles also calcify.
Intracellular calcium granules become extracellular when the cells die and break up. However, extracellular granules, which are scattered diffusely among the other extracellular components of the lipid cores of lesions, are not only cell components that have calcified intracellularly. Calcification of cell components also occurs only after their release into the extracellular environment and these granules in fact constitute the bulk of those present. In most lipid cores, extracellular granules outnumber intracellular calcium granules from the very beginning of granule formation. The size and density of extracellular granules is variable. They often exceed the size of intracellular granules and frequently form aggregates of many granules. The overall picture is that of a relatively fine salt-and-pepper-like distribution either throughout the lipid core or sometimes only, or more heavily, in the deeper parts of a lipid core (Figure 7
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The precise identity of the extracellular particles that became the nidi for calcium precipitation are as difficult to determine with certainty as the nidi in intracellular calcification. The most abundant extracellular particles in atherosclerotic lesions are vesicle-like structures that are sometimes outlined with calcium deposits. Vesicle-like structures have been seen by many authors in atherosclerotic lesions and other conditions and have been designated with various terms, most often as matrix vesicles (27). Our own observations agree with those of Ghadially (28), who concluded that the so-called matrix vesicles are part and parcel of matrical lipidic cell debris, which can take several forms (vesicles, vacuoles, granules, membranes, and larger obvious cell fragments), and that all or most of these structures can calcify when conditions are appropriate.
Altogether, the mineral might account for up to 10% of the lipid core of a type IV lesion in a person 2029 y old. Although visible by high-resolution light microscopy, this degree and pattern of mineralization may remain undetected with available clinical imaging techniques. When the resolution of clinical imaging becomes high enough to detect calcium particles of microscopic size dispersed over a region <5 mm in diameter, then it will be possible to identify atheromas whether they narrow the arterial lumen or not. Mahoney et al (29) examined the coronary arteries of 384 subjects aged 2937 y by electron beam computed tomography and detected calcification in 21%. In almost the same age group (3039 y; Figure 4
), we found that 63% of the subjects had coronary artery lesions that mostly contained a lipid core, and most of these contained at least microscopically detectable calcium particles.
The present observation that calcium deposition begins with the formation of a core of extracellular lipid is in agreement with the statement by Wexler et al (30) that the presence of calcium implies the association of lipid-rich (and presumably vulnerable) plaque. However, the amount of calcium varies greatly in the lesions of individuals of identical age even when the lesions and their lipid cores look similar otherwise. A systemic, individually variable predisposition to mineralization must therefore be present in addition to the local factors.
None of the calcium-granule-containing advanced lesions of young persons that we studied showed histologic evidence of osseous metaplasia. Nor were elastic fibers, either intact or altered, a nidus for the deposition of calcium granules. Lesions designated as types I and II did not have calcium deposits; type III lesions only rarely had calcium deposits and when they did only a few fine granules were visible.
With increasing age of subjects (or age, extent, and density of the extracellular lipid accumulation), the initial particles of calcium increase in size and then fuse into large aggregates. From middle age, large clumps of mineral may dominate the core of a lesion by replacing the extracellular lipid at the base or throughout the lesion core. Osseous metaplasia may appear at this time. When
50% of the cross-sectional area of a lesion consists of mineral, it can be called a type VII (calcified) lesion.
| REGRESSION AND PREVENTION OF PROGRESSION |
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Histologic evidence of the ability of lesion types I and II to form, dissolve, and reform was obtained in children. Fewer children have lesion types I and II in the period between infancy and puberty than either in infancy or puberty (2, 5). A reduction in the number of lesions now histologically classified as types IIII was also noted by Aschoff (19) and other pathologists in Germany and Austria with the increasing duration of World War I and was attributed to wartime food shortages.
In monkeys, experimental lesions comparable to human lesion types IIII can disappear from arteries within 6 mo of blood cholesterol being reduced to very low concentrations through changes in diet (5, 31). The mechanism whereby these lesion types disappear consists of the gradual death of existing macrophage foam cells and cessation in the formation of new ones (5). Small amounts of extracellular lipid can also be removed from arteries within this time frame.
At susceptible arterial sites, influx of atherogenic lipoprotein into the intima may be so excessive as to induce formation of very large numbers of macrophage foam cells and, over time, of a core of extracellular lipid, the hallmark of lesion types IV and V. The studies in monkeys indicate that it takes far longer than a 6-mo period of very low blood cholesterol to substantially reduce or remove cores of extracellular lipid. Besides, fibrocalcific remnants remain in locations formerly occupied by lipid cores. Preferable to the regression of lipid cores is prevention of their development because it will prevent the possibility of overt clinical disease and because prevention surely requires less drastic measures than regression.
In Figure 3
, the ascending line for lesion types IIIVI reflects mainly cases with lesions with lipid cores. Such lesions emerge around puberty and by the age of 27 y they are present in about one-quarter of the population. Therefore, measures that reduce risk factors responsible for the influx of excessive atherogenic lipoprotein into the arterial wall and thus the formation of lipid cores should be in place by the time of puberty.
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