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Thin-walled microvessels in human coronary atherosclerotic plaques show incomplete endothelial junctions: relevance of compromised structural integrity for intraplaque microvascular leakage

Authors :
Judith C, Sluimer
Frank D, Kolodgie
Ann P J J, Bijnens
Kimberly, Maxfield
Erica, Pacheco
Bob, Kutys
Hans, Duimel
Peter M, Frederik
Victor W M, van Hinsbergh
Renu, Virmani
Mat J A P, Daemen
Other departments
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 53(17), 1517-1527. Elsevier USA
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

ObjectivesThis study sought to examine the ultrastructure of microvessels in normal and atherosclerotic coronary arteries and its association with plaque phenotype.BackgroundMicrovessels in atherosclerotic plaques are an entry point for inflammatory and red blood cells; yet, there are limited data on the ultrastructural integrity of microvessels in human atherosclerosis.MethodsMicrovessel density (MVD) and ultrastructural morphology were determined in the adventitia, intima-media border, and atherosclerotic plaque of 28 coronary arteries using immunohistochemistry for endothelial cells (Ulex europeaus, CD31/CD34), basement membrane (laminin, collagen IV), and mural cells (desmin, alpha-smooth muscle [SM] actin, smoothelin, SM1, SM2, SMemb). Ultrastructural characterization of microvessel morphology was performed by electron microscopy.ResultsThe MVD was increased in advanced plaques compared with early plaques, which correlated with lesion morphology. Adventitial MVD was higher than intraplaque MVD in normal arteries and early plaques, but adventitial and intraplaque MVD were similar in advanced plaques. Although microvessel basement membranes were intact, the percentage of thin-walled microvessels was similarly low in normal and atherosclerotic adventitia, in the adventitia and the plaque, and in all plaque types. Intraplaque microvascular endothelial cells (ECs) were abnormal, with membrane blebs, intracytoplasmic vacuoles, open EC-EC junctions, and basement membrane detachment. Leukocyte infiltration was frequently observed by electron microscopy, and confirmed by CD45RO and CD68 immunohistochemistry.ConclusionsThe MVD was associated with coronary plaque progression and morphology. Microvessels were thin-walled in normal and atherosclerotic arteries, and the compromised structural integrity of microvascular endothelium may explain the microvascular leakage responsible for intraplaque hemorrhage in advanced human coronary atherosclerosis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07351097
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 53(17), 1517-1527. Elsevier USA
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....c9e4ba291334420040b8438f937791ef