Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction

In this review we report our recent findings of histopathological features of plaque instability and the association with Mycoplasma pneumoniae (MP) and Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP) infection, studying thrombosed coronary artery segments (CAS) of patients who died due to acute myocardial infarction. Vulnerable plaques are known to be associated with fat atheromas and inflammation of the plaque. Here we demonstrated that vulnerability is also related with focal positive vessel remodeling that maintains relatively well preserved lumen even in the presence of large atheromatous plaques. This phenomena may explain why the cinecoronariography may not detect large and dangerous vulnerable plaques. Greater amount of these bacteria in vulnerable plaques is associated with adventitial inflammation and positive vessel remodeling: the mean numbers of lymphocytes were significantly higher in adventitia than in the plaque, good direct correlation was obtained between numbers of CD20 B cells and numbers of CP infected cells in adventitia, and between % area of MP-DNA in the plaque and cross sectional area of the vessel, suggesting a cause-effect relationship. Mycoplasma is a bacterium that needs cholesterol for proliferation and may increase virulence of other infectious agents. In conclusion, co-infection by Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae may represent an important co-factor for plaque instability, leading to coronary plaque thrombosis and acute myocardial infarction, since larger amount of these bacteria strongly correlated with histological signs of more vulnerability of the plaque. The search of CMV and Helicobacter pilori in these tissues resulted negative.

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Main Authors: HIGUCHI,Maria de Lourdes, RAMIRES,Jose A. F.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo 2002
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652002000400007
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spelling oai:scielo:S0036-466520020004000072002-09-04Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarctionHIGUCHI,Maria de LourdesRAMIRES,Jose A. F. Chlamydia pneumoniae Mycoplasma pneumoniae Infection Atherosclerosis Vulnerable plaque Myocardial infarction In this review we report our recent findings of histopathological features of plaque instability and the association with Mycoplasma pneumoniae (MP) and Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP) infection, studying thrombosed coronary artery segments (CAS) of patients who died due to acute myocardial infarction. Vulnerable plaques are known to be associated with fat atheromas and inflammation of the plaque. Here we demonstrated that vulnerability is also related with focal positive vessel remodeling that maintains relatively well preserved lumen even in the presence of large atheromatous plaques. This phenomena may explain why the cinecoronariography may not detect large and dangerous vulnerable plaques. Greater amount of these bacteria in vulnerable plaques is associated with adventitial inflammation and positive vessel remodeling: the mean numbers of lymphocytes were significantly higher in adventitia than in the plaque, good direct correlation was obtained between numbers of CD20 B cells and numbers of CP infected cells in adventitia, and between % area of MP-DNA in the plaque and cross sectional area of the vessel, suggesting a cause-effect relationship. Mycoplasma is a bacterium that needs cholesterol for proliferation and may increase virulence of other infectious agents. In conclusion, co-infection by Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae may represent an important co-factor for plaque instability, leading to coronary plaque thrombosis and acute myocardial infarction, since larger amount of these bacteria strongly correlated with histological signs of more vulnerability of the plaque. The search of CMV and Helicobacter pilori in these tissues resulted negative.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto de Medicina Tropical de São PauloRevista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo v.44 n.4 20022002-07-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652002000400007en10.1590/S0036-46652002000400007
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country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author HIGUCHI,Maria de Lourdes
RAMIRES,Jose A. F.
spellingShingle HIGUCHI,Maria de Lourdes
RAMIRES,Jose A. F.
Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
author_facet HIGUCHI,Maria de Lourdes
RAMIRES,Jose A. F.
author_sort HIGUCHI,Maria de Lourdes
title Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
title_short Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
title_full Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
title_fullStr Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
title_full_unstemmed Infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
title_sort infectious agents in coronary atheromas: a possible role in the pathogenesis of plaque rupture and acute myocardial infarction
description In this review we report our recent findings of histopathological features of plaque instability and the association with Mycoplasma pneumoniae (MP) and Chlamydia pneumoniae (CP) infection, studying thrombosed coronary artery segments (CAS) of patients who died due to acute myocardial infarction. Vulnerable plaques are known to be associated with fat atheromas and inflammation of the plaque. Here we demonstrated that vulnerability is also related with focal positive vessel remodeling that maintains relatively well preserved lumen even in the presence of large atheromatous plaques. This phenomena may explain why the cinecoronariography may not detect large and dangerous vulnerable plaques. Greater amount of these bacteria in vulnerable plaques is associated with adventitial inflammation and positive vessel remodeling: the mean numbers of lymphocytes were significantly higher in adventitia than in the plaque, good direct correlation was obtained between numbers of CD20 B cells and numbers of CP infected cells in adventitia, and between % area of MP-DNA in the plaque and cross sectional area of the vessel, suggesting a cause-effect relationship. Mycoplasma is a bacterium that needs cholesterol for proliferation and may increase virulence of other infectious agents. In conclusion, co-infection by Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae may represent an important co-factor for plaque instability, leading to coronary plaque thrombosis and acute myocardial infarction, since larger amount of these bacteria strongly correlated with histological signs of more vulnerability of the plaque. The search of CMV and Helicobacter pilori in these tissues resulted negative.
publisher Instituto de Medicina Tropical de São Paulo
publishDate 2002
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652002000400007
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