Temporal (Giant Cell) Arteritis
Granulomatous vasculitis that classically involves branches of the carotid artery
Most common form of vasculitis in older adults (> 50 years); usually affects females
Presents as headache (temporal artery involvement), visual disturbances (ophthalmic artery involvement), and jaw claudication. Flu-like symptoms with joint and muscle pain (polymyalgia rheumatica) are often present. ESR is elevated.
Biopsy reveals inflamed vessel wall with giant cells and intima! fibrosis (Fig. 7.2). i. Lesions are segmental; diagnosis requires biopsy of a long segment of vessel, and a negative biopsy does not exclude disease.
Treatment is corticosteroids; **high risk of blindness without treatment **
Takayasu Arteritis
Granulomatous vasculitis that classically involves the aortic arch at branch points
Presents in adults < 50 years old (classically, young Asian females) as visual and neurologic symptoms with a weak or absent pulse in the upper extremity (‘pulseless disease’).
ESR is elevated.
Treatment is corticosteroids.
Polyarteritis Nodosa
Necrotizing vasculitis involving multiple organs; lungs are spared.
Classically presents in young adults as hypertension (renal artery involvement), abdominal pain with melena (mesenteric artery involvement), neurologic disturbances, and skin lesions. Associated with serum HBsAg
Lesions of varying stages are present. Early lesion consists of transmural inflammation with fibrinoid necrosis; eventually heals with fibrosis, producing a ‘string-of-pearls’ appearance on imaging
Treatment is corticosteroids and cyclophosphamide; fatal if not treated
Kawasaki Disease
Classically affects **Asian children < 4 years old **
Presents with nonspecific signs including fever, conjunctivitis, erythematous rash of palms and soles, and enlarged cervical lymph nodes
Coronary artery involvement is common and leads to risk for (1) thrombosis with myocardial infarction and (2) aneurysm with rupture.
Treatment is aspirin and IVIG; disease is self-limited.
Buerger Disease
Raynaud phenomenon is often present,
3. Highly associated with heavy smoking; treatment is smoking cessation.
Wegener Granulomatosis
Necrotizing granulomatous vasculitis involving nasopharynx, lungs, and kidneys
Classic presentation is a middle-aged male with sinusitis or nasopharyngeal ulceration, hemoptysis with bilateral nodular lung infiltrates, and hematuria due to rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis.
Serum c-ANCA levels correlate with disease activity,
Biopsy reveals large necrotizing granulomas with adjacent necrotizing vasculitis
Treatment is cyclophosphamide and steroids; relapses are common
Microscopic Polyangiitis
Necrotizing vasculitis involving multiple organs, especially lung and **kidney, **and skin with pauchi-immune glomerulonephritis and palpable purpura.
Presentation is similar to Wegener granulomatosis, but nasopharyngeal involvement and granulomas are absent.
Serum p-ANCA (MPO- ANCA) levels correlate with disease activity.
Treatment is corticosteroids and cyclophosphamide; relapses are common.
Churg-Strauss Syndrome
Henoch-Schön lein Purpura
Vasculitis due to IgA immune complex deposition; most common vasculitis in children
Presents with palpable purpura on buttocks and legs, CI pain and bleeding, and
hematuria (IgA nephropathy); usually occurs following an upper respiratory tract infection
Disease is self-limited, but may recur; treated with steroids, if severe
Atherosclerosis
Intimal plaque that obstructs blood flow
Consists of a necrotic lipid core (mostly cholesterol) with a fibromuscular cap (Fig. 7,5); often undergoes dystrophic calcification
Involves large- and medium-sized arteries; abdominal aorta, coronary artery, popliteal artery, and internal carotid artery are commonly affected.
Pathogenesis
1. Damage to endothelium allows lipids to leak into the intima.
Inflammation and healing leads to deposition of’extracellular matrix and proliferation of smooth muscle.
Histology
Arteriolosclerosis
Narrowing of small arterioles; divided into hyaline and hyperplastic types:
Hyaline arteriolosclerosis is caused by proteins leaking into the vessel wall, producing vascular thickening; proteins are seen as pink hyaline on microscopy (Fig. 7.7).
Hyperplastic arteriolosclerosis involves thickening of vessel wall by hyperplasia of smooth muscle (‘onion-skin appearance)
May lead to fibrinoid necrosis of the vessel wall with hemorrhage; classically causes acute renal failure with a characteristic ‘flea-bitten’ appearance
Monkeberg Medial Calcific Sclerosis
Calcification of the media of muscular (medium-sized) arteries (radial or ulnar); nonobstructive
Not clinically significant; seen as an incidental finding on x-ray or mammography
X-ray: “Pipesteam” arteries
Hypertension
Systolic BP >140 mmHg or diastolic BP > 90 mmHg
Risks: age, obesity, diabetse, smoking, genetics, Black > white > Asian
Essential HTN: increased CO or TPR
secondary HTN: renal disease
Hypertensive Emergency: Severe hypertension >180/120 with evidence of acute, ongoing target organ damange (papilledema, mental status change)
Malignant vs. Benign HTN
Benign HTN is a mild or moderate elevation in blood pressure;
Malignant HTN is severe elevation in blood pressure (> 200/120 mm Hg}; comprises < 5% of cases
Aortic Dissection
Intimal tear with dissection of blood through media of the aortic wall
Presents as sharp, tearing chest pain that radiates to the back
**- ** Complications include pericardial tamponade (most common cause of death), rupture with fatal hemorrhage, and obstruction of branching arteries (e.g., coronary or renal) with resultant end-organ ischemia.
Thoracic Aneurysm
Balloon-like dilation of the thoracic aorta
Due to weakness in the aortic wall. Classically seen in tertiary syphilis; endarteritis of the vasa vasorum results in luminal narrowing, decreased flow, and atrophy of the vessel wall. Results in a ‘tree-bark’ appearance of the aorta (Fig, 7.12)
Major complication is dilation of the aortic valve root, resulting in aortic valve insufficiency
Other complications include compression of mediastinal structures (e.g., airway or esophagus) and thrombosis/embolism.
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
Balloon-like dilation of the abdominal aorta; usually arises below the renal arteries, but above the aortic bifurcation
Primarily due to atherosclerosis; classically seen in male smokers > 60 years old with hypertension
- Atherosclerosis increases the diffusion barrier to the media, resulting in atrophy and weakness of the vessel wrall.
- Presents as a pulsatile abdominal mass that grows with time
- Major complication is rupture, especially when > 5 cm in diameter; presents with triad of hypotension, pulsatile abdominal mass, and flank pain
- Other complications include compression of local structures (e.g., ureter) and thrombosis/embolism.
Hemangioma
Benign tumor comprised of blood vessels
Commonly present at birth; often regresses during childhood
Most often involves skin and liver
Strawberry Hemangioma: Benign capillary hemangioma of infancy
Cherry Hemangioma: benign capillary hemangioma of the elderly
Pyogenic granuloma
Cystic hygroma
Angiosarcoma
Malignant proliferation of endothelial cells; highly aggressive
Kaposi sarcoma
Low-grade malignant proliferation of endothelial cells; associated with HHV-8
Presents as purple patches, plaques, and nodules on the skin; may also involve visceral organs.
Stable Angina
Stable angina is chest pain that arises with exertion or emotional stress.
Due to atherosclerosis of coronary arteries with > 70% stenosis; decreased blood flow is not able to meet the metabolic demands of the myocardium during exertion.
Represents reversible injury to myocytes (no necrosis)
Presents as chest pain (lasting < 20 minutes) that radiates to the left arm or jaw, diaphoresis, and shortness of breath
EKG shows ST-segment depression due to subendocardial ischemia.
Relieved by rest or nitroglycerin
Unstable Angina
Unstable angina is chest pain that occurs at rest.
Usually due to rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque with thrombosis and incomplete occlusion of a coronary artery.
Represents reversible injury to myocytes (no necrosis)
EKG shows ST-segment depression due to subendocardial ischemia.
Relieved by nitroglycerin
High risk of progression to myocardial infarction
Prinzmetel Angina
Prinzmetal angina is episodic chest pain unrelated to exertion.
Due to coronary artery vasospasm
Represents reversible injury to myocytes (no necrosis)
EKG shows ST-segment elevation due to transmural ischemia.
Relieved by nitroglycerin or calcium channel blockers
Myocardial Infarction
Necrosis of cardiac myocytes
Infarction usually involves the left ventricle (LV); right ventricle (RV) and both atria
are generally spared.
EKG
Labs
Treatment