THE ROLE OF INFLAMMATION AND INFECTION IN CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE
New insights into atherosclerosis, the most common disease affecting coronary arteries, may change therapeutic strategies from largely symptomatic to causal. Atherosclerotic plaques contain a lipid-related, immune-mediated inflammation, with release of secretory products capable of changing plaque m...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of medicine 2001-01, Vol.52 (1), p.289-297 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | New insights into atherosclerosis, the most common disease affecting
coronary arteries, may change therapeutic strategies from largely symptomatic
to causal. Atherosclerotic plaques contain a lipid-related, immune-mediated
inflammation, with release of secretory products capable of changing plaque
morphology. Plaques prone to complications contain large numbers of
inflammatory cells; stable plaques contain little inflammation. Similarly,
atherectomy specimens from patients with coronary syndromes revealed more
inflammatory cells in unstable than in stable patients. These observations, and
the fact that acute coronary syndromes are associated with increased blood
levels of inflammatory markers, have renewed interest in the possible
relationship between infection and atherogenesis. Of all potential candidate
antigens,
Chlamydia pneumoniae
presently is considered the most likely
because a substantial number of patients with unstable syndromes contain
C.
pneumoniae
-reactive T cells, both in blood and within the
atherosclerotic plaque, suggesting enhancement of intraplaque inflammation. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4219 1545-326X |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.med.52.1.289 |