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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

Atherosclerotic Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

Aneurysm withthrombus

Kidney Kidney

Aorta

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

Syphilitic Aneurysm – Ascending Arch of Aorta

Aneurysm

Aortic Valve

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

Ascending Aorta – Dissecting Aneurysm

Dissection

Aortic Valve

Aorta

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

Axilla –Pseudoaneurysm, stab wound severed brachial artery

Brachial artery

Pseudoaneurysm withblood clotAxillary fat

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

Coiled Embolus in Pulmonary Artery

Pulmonary Emboli removed from Pulmonary Artery

CASE OF PULMONARY INFARCT

• Next photograph is from an elderly male in congestive heart failure

• He experienced sudden pleuritic chest pain followed by hemoptysis

Lung – Pulmonary Infarct

Lung

Pulmonary infarct with hemorrhage

Embolus

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

Greenfield Filter in Inferior Vena Cava with Trapped Emboli

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

MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION

• Topic covered in lecture• Case study discussed in tutorial

DISEASES OF VEINS

• Varicose Veins• Thrombophlebitis

VARICOSE VEINS

• Legs: associated with pregnancy, increasing age, and can be familial

• Hemorrhoids: associated with pregnancy and cirrhosis

• Esophageal varices: associated with cirrhosis

COMPLICATIONS OF VARICSOSE VEINS

• Pain• Stasis• Thrombosis• Bleeding

THROMBOPHLEBITIS

• Deep vein thrombosis, usually in lower extremities• Pain• Risk of pulmonary embolism• Associated with: congestive heart failure,

prolonged bed rest, post operative & post partal states, trauma, & neoplasm (esp. pancreatic cancer-Trousseau’s sign)

Diseases of Lymphatics

• Lymphangitis – inflamed lymphatics• Secondary Lymphedema from inflammatory

scarring, metastatic carcinoma, surgical resection (eg. arm edema post mastectomy), radiation therapy induced fibrosis, & filariasis

CARDIOVASCULAR PATHOLOGY

Tutorial I

The End

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