Atherosclerosis Complicating Chronic Hypertension

The accelerating effect of hypertension on atherogenesis in the aorta and iliofemoral and coronary arteries is presented here as a graded function of elevated intraarterial pressure. Predilection of the abdominal aorta and iliofemoral arteries for atherosclerosis can be explained on the basis of pressure augmentation by reflected pressure pulse waves and the increase in hydrostatic pressure that is produced by standing. Wave reflection is intensified by vasoconstriction, which is a characteristic not only of hypertension but also occurs with upright posture. Standing also raises the hydrostatic pressure of blood in vessels below heart level. Coronary atherosclerosis seems likely to relate to the fact that the coronary vessels are located in an area of high pressure in the arterial system and that their intramyocardial branches are normally completely occluded during systole — a condition which could be accompanied by subtle differences in the pressure-volume characteristics of the epicardial vessels.Evidence is presented from actuarial statistics, epidemiologic studies, and laboratory experiments to indicate that the level of arterial pressure has a measurable effect on the metabolism of arterial smooth muscle cells. Thus arterial pressure is viewed as having a metabolic determinant role in addition to its vital role in the circulation of blood.

[1]  H. Wolinsky Mesenchymal Response of the Blood Vessel Wall: A Potential avenue for understanding and treating Atherosclerosis , 1973, Circulation research.

[2]  H G Korvin,et al.  Intermittent claudication. , 1971, British medical journal.

[3]  W. Kannel,et al.  Intermittent Claudication: Incidence in the Framingham Study , 1970, Circulation.

[4]  H. Barkley,et al.  The Relative Roles of Blood Cholesterol Level and Blood Pressure Level in the Production of Experimen Tal Aortic Atheroma in Rabbits , 1958, Angiology.

[5]  J C PATERSON,et al.  The pathology of atherosclerosis. , 1959, Medical services journal, Canada.

[6]  H. Lofland,et al.  Effects of insulin deficiency, hypothyroidism, and hypertension on cholesterol metabolism in the squirrel monkey. , 1972, Experimental and molecular pathology.

[7]  L. Solberg [Blood supply of the heart]. , 1963, Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke.

[8]  Y. Sako Effects of turbulent blood flow and hypertension on experimental atherosclerosis. , 1962, JAMA.

[9]  C. Moses Development of Atherosclerosis in Dogs with Hypercholesterolemia and Chronic Hypertension , 1954, Circulation research.

[10]  R. Rossrussell OBSERVATIONS ON INTRACEREBRAL ANEURYSMS. , 1963, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[11]  M. M. Daly,et al.  CHOLESTEROL CONCENTRATION AND CHOLESTEROL SYNTHESIS IN AORTAS OF RATS WITH RENAL HYPERTENSION. , 1963, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[12]  R. Ross,et al.  THE SMOOTH MUSCLE CELL I. In Vivo Synthesis of Connective Tissue Proteins , 1971 .

[13]  H. Wolinsky,et al.  Response of the Rat Aortic Media to Hypertension: Morphological and Chemical Studies , 1970, Circulation research.

[14]  J. Homans Diseases of the veins. , 1946, The New England journal of medicine.

[15]  B. Bronte-Stewart,et al.  The relationship between experimental hypertension and cholesterol-induced atheroma in rabbits. , 1954, The Journal of pathology and bacteriology.

[16]  Donald L. Fry,et al.  Certain Chemorheologic Considerations Regarding the Blood Vascular Interface with Particular Reference to Coronary Artery Disease , 1969 .

[17]  S. Wilens Orthostatic influences on the distribution of atheromatous lesions in the cerebral and other arteries. , 1948, Archives of internal medicine.

[18]  E. Frohlich,et al.  Re‐Examination of the Hemodynamics of Hypertension , 1969, The American journal of the medical sciences.

[19]  E. Mosbach,et al.  BLOOD PRESSURE, CHOLESTEROL CONTENT OF SERUM AND TISSUES, AND ATHEROGENESIS IN THE RAT , 1958, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[20]  W. Hollander,et al.  Hypertension, Antihypertensive Drugs and Atherosclerosis , 1973, Circulation.

[21]  F. Gessner Hemodynamic Theories of Atherogenesis , 1973 .

[22]  W. Kannel,et al.  Blood pressure and risk of coronary heart disease: the Framingham study. , 1969, Diseases of the chest.

[23]  D. Beevers,et al.  Antihypertensive treatment and the course of established cerebral vascular disease. , 1973, Lancet.

[24]  G. Mcmillan,et al.  Pathology of atherosclerosis. , 1951, The American journal of medicine.

[25]  D. Kramsch,et al.  Arterial wall metabolism in experimental hypertension of coarctation of the aorta of short duration. , 1968, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[26]  Q. Deming Experimental atherosclerosis and hypertension , 1966 .

[27]  E. Wood,et al.  The relation of age and blood pressure to atheroma in the pulmonary arteries and thoracic aorta in congenital heart disease. , 1960, Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology.

[28]  J. Stamler,et al.  Racial patterns of coronary heart disease. Blood pressure, body weight, and serum cholesterol in whites and Negroes. , 1961 .

[29]  C. Wiggers,et al.  Basic Hemodynamic Changes Produced by Aortic Coarctation of Different Degrees , 1951, Circulation.

[30]  D. L. Fry Certain Histological and Chemical Responses of the Vascular Interface to Acutely Induced Mechanical Stress in the Aorta of the Dog , 1969, Circulation research.

[31]  O. Paul Risks of mild hypertension: a ten-year report , 1971, British heart journal.

[32]  H. Movat,et al.  The role of smooth muscle cells in the fibrogenesis of arteriosclerosis. , 1960, The American journal of pathology.

[33]  H. Wolinsky,et al.  Effects of Hypertension and Its Reversal on the Thoracic Aorta of Male and Female Rats: Morphological and Chemical Studies , 1971, Circulation research.

[34]  E. Moschcowitz Hyperplastic arteriosclerosis versus atherosclerosis. , 1950, Journal of the American Medical Association.

[35]  R K Broadaway,et al.  The pressure is on. , 1971, Journal of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama.

[36]  W. Moss,et al.  Effect of Experimental Renal Hypertension on Experimental Thiouracil‐Cholesterol Atherosclerosis in Dogs , 1957, Circulation research.

[37]  J. A. Fox,et al.  Localization of atheroma: a theory based on boundary layer separation. , 1966, British heart journal.

[38]  G. Burch,et al.  THE ANOMALOUS LEFT CORONARY ARTERY: AN EXPERIMENT OF NATURE. , 1964, The American journal of medicine.

[39]  G. Burch,et al.  Hypertension and arteriosclerosis. , 1960, American heart journal.

[40]  A. Wennevold The origin of the innocent "vibratory" murmur studied with intracardiac phonocardiography. , 2009, Acta medica Scandinavica.

[41]  R. W. Russell,et al.  OBSERVATIONS ON INTRACEREBRAL ANEURYSMS. , 1963 .

[42]  M. Texon,et al.  A hemodynamic concept of atherosclerosis, with particular reference to coronary occlusion. , 1957, A.M.A. archives of internal medicine.

[43]  G. Rowe,et al.  A hemodynamic study of hypertension including observations on coronary blood flow. , 1961, Annals of internal medicine.

[44]  P. Wolf,et al.  Epidemiologic assessment of the role of blood pressure in stroke. The Framingham study. , 1970, JAMA.