Cause of thrombosis in human atherosclerotic arteries.

Although it has been known for a long time that thrombosis nearly always develops in atherosclerotic arteries--and almost never in normal vessels--the mechanism through which atherosclerosis promotes thrombosis was unknown until this problem was explored through histologic examination of complete serial section sets of thrombosed atherosclerotic arteries. These studies, repeatedly confirmed, revealed that the thrombi are triggered by microscopic cracks in the collagen cap of advanced plaques. Blood most often seeps from the arterial lumen through the cracks into the underlying lipid gruel before the breaks or cracks are plugged by the thrombi (which function as hemostatic seals of the breaks). These results are parallel to results of experimental studies in which the synergism of endotheliotoxic and pressor agents produced thrombi over cap breaks and sub-break hemorrhages only in arteries with advanced collagen-rich plaques, not in arteries with early atherosclerosis or in normal vessels. This finding indicates that advanced atherosclerosis makes the arterial wall much more fragile and that, once broken, this wall exposes the blood to powerful thrombogenic materials that do not exist in normal arterial tissue. At present, human and experimental evidence suggest that the thrombogenic fissures of advanced plaque caps can be promoted by several factors, such as a surge in intraarterial pressure or insults that damage the caps structurally and increase their vulnerability to any type of stress such as certain metabolic, exogenous chemical and immune insults, spontaneous molecular changes of collagen with time and hemorrhages of capillaries that invade advanced plaques from the adventitia or the arterial lumen.

[1]  E. Falk Plaque rupture with severe pre-existing stenosis precipitating coronary thrombosis. Characteristics of coronary atherosclerotic plaques underlying fatal occlusive thrombi. , 1983, British heart journal.

[2]  I. Chapman MORPHOGENESIS OF OCCLUDING CORONARY ARTERY THROMBOSIS. , 1965, Archives of pathology.

[3]  M. Davies,et al.  The pathological basis and microanatomy of occlusive thrombus formation in human coronary arteries. , 1981, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[4]  J. McGeachie,et al.  The effect of nicotine on aortic endothelium. A quantitative ultrastructural study. , 1987, Atherosclerosis.

[5]  P. Constantinides Pathogenesis of cerebral artery thrombosis in man. , 1967, Archives of pathology.

[6]  A. Barger,et al.  Hypothesis: vasa vasorum and neovascularization of human coronary arteries. A possible role in the pathophysiology of atherosclerosis. , 1984, The New England journal of medicine.

[7]  P. Constantindes CORONARY THROMBOSIS LINKED TO FISSURE IN ATHEROSCLEROTIC VESSEL WALL. , 1964, JAMA.

[8]  P. Constantinides Atherosclerosis--a general survey and synthesis. , 1984, Survey and synthesis of pathology research.

[9]  P. Constantinides,et al.  Plaque fissures in human coronary thrombosis , 1966 .

[10]  M. Kiser,et al.  Arterial effects of palmitic, linoleic and acetoacetic acid. , 1981, Atherosclerosis.

[11]  M. Friedman,et al.  The pathogenesis of a coronary thrombus. , 1966, The American journal of pathology.