Atherosclerotic plaque may bulge into lumen causing obstruction of lumen
Further complications calcification, thrombosis, ulceration, hemorrhage, rupture and aneurysm formation can occur
Superadded changes in atherosclerosis
Acute coronary syndromes including acute MI, unstable angina and sudden ischemic death are due to superadded changes in pre existing atherosclerotic plaque
These changes are
Acute changes in ahtheromatous plaque
Coronary artery thrombosis
Local platelet aggregation and coronary spasm
Acute changes in atheromatous plaque –
hemorrhage, fissuring or ulceration resulting in thrombosis and embolization of atheromatous debris
These changes occur due to coronary artery spasm, tachycardia, intraplaque hemorrhage and hypercholerolemia
Coronary artery thrombosis
Ulceration of fixed chronic atheromatous plaque leads to initiation of thrombosis as the lipid core of the plaque is highly thrombogenic
small fragments of thrombotic material embolizes to terminal branches causing microinfarcts of myocardium
Local platelet aggregation and coronary spasm
Platelet aggregates on atheromatous plaque short of forming thrombus
These platelet aggregates release vasospasmic mediators such as thromboxane A2 causing vasospasm of already existing atherosclerotic plaque
Non-atherosclerotic causes
Vasospasm – in association with platelet aggregation and as in cocaine abuse
Stenosis of coronary ostia- in conditions like aortic atherosclerotic plaque encroaching on opening of coronary ostia or extension of syphilitic aortitis
Arteritis – as in rheumatic arteritis, poly arteritis nodosa, thromboangitis obliterans, or other bacterial infection
Embolism – emboli from else where in the body may occlude coronary arteries and their branches
Thrombotic diseases – conditions with hypercoagulability of blood such as in shock, polycythemia vera, sickle cell anemia and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
Trauma – penetrating or blunt injury
Aneurysm –
dissecting aneurysm of the aorta into the coronary artery may produce thrombotic coronary occlusion
Rarely congenital, mycotic and syphilitic aneurysms may occur in coronary arteries
Compression – from outside by primary or secondary tumors of the heart may result in occlusion
References
Vinay kumar, Abul K.Abbas, Nelson Fausto, Jon C. Aster. Robbins and Cotran Pathologic basis of disease. 8th edition.
Harsh mohan. Text book of Pathology.8th edition.2019