Atherosclerosis Basics
Plaque Structure & Rupture
Myocardial Ischemia
Myocardial Infarction
Compensatory & Clinical Outcomes
100

This type of cell proliferates and produces extracellular matrix in plaques

What are smooth muscle cells

100

This structure forms over a lipid core and determines plaque stability.

what is fibrous plaque

100

This imbalance between oxygen supply and demand defines myocardial ischemia

What is reduced coronary perfusion?

100

This defines irreversible myocardial cell death due to prolonged ischemia

What is myocardial infarction?

100

This process results in partial or complete occlusion of a coronary artery.

What is thrombosis?

200

This layer of the artery is first affected in early atherosclerosis

What is the intima

200

Plaque rupture exposes this thrombogenic material to circulating blood

what is necrotic lipid core

200

This metabolic shift occurs in ischemic myocardial cells

What is anaerobic metabolism?

200

This zone of infarction is the first region affected in MI.

What is the subendocardium?

200

This ultimate complication occurs when blood flow is not restored after plaque rupture.

what is myocardial infarction

300

The fatty streak is primarily composed of these cells.

What are foam cells

300

This event triggers platelet adhesion and thrombus formation after plaque rupture

what is endothelial disruption

300

This byproduct accumulates during ischemia, contributing to chest pain.

What is lactic acid?

300

This type of necrosis is characteristic of myocardial infarction after 4 hours

What is coagulative necrosis?

300

in myocardial infarction due to occulsion of the LAD, how would you expect the mean electrical axis to change

what is left axis deviation

400

oxidized LDL can show this coloring on histology

what is yellow-brown (due to lipofushion) 

400

This type of plaque is more prone to rupture due to a thin fibrous cap

what is vulnerable plaque

400

This ion imbalance during ischemia contributes to arrhythmias.

What is calcium overload?

400

These biomarkers are released into the bloodstream after myocardial injury.

what are troponins

400

This reversible condition occurs if ischemia is brief and non-lethal.

what is myocardial stunning/hibernation

500

This process begins with endothelial injury and lipid accumulation in arterial walls

what is atherosclerosis

500

This inflammatory process weakens the fibrous cap of plaques.

What is macrophage-mediated degradation

500

This cellular structure fails early in ischemia, impairing contraction

What is the mitochondria?

500

This electrical abnormality may indicate transmural infarction.

what is ST elevation

500

This adaptive response provides alternative blood flow in chronic ischemia.

What is collateral vessel formation?