Coronary artery necroses and calcification in chronic ischemic heart disease
2010
AIM: To study some particularly inadequately studied mechanisms for the development of coronary artery calcification (CAC), which are unassociated with calcified atheromatous masses of atherosclerotic plaques. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: . Endarterectomized coronary artery (CA) segments obtained during aortocoronary bypass surgery were pathomorphologically studied in 150 patients aged 49-72 years with coronary heart disease (CHD). CAC was found in 92% of cases. Two types of CAC were identified: one of them was associated with calcified atheromatous masses of atherosclerotic plaques; the other was related to necroses in the fibrous plaque parts. The atheromatous masses exhibited calcareous deposits as fine-grained masses of small extent. In chronic CHD, morphological signs of instability of atherosclerotic plaques were observed in 23.3% of cases, these being associated with lamellar CAC in two thirds. CONCLUSION: Calcification in the necrotic area of fibrous parts of stenotic plaques is typical of chronic CHD and is frequently attended by the development of large-focal calcareous deposits generally as laminas (lamellar calcification). Impaired transmural perfusion of plasma is noted to be involved in the development of necroses in stenotic CA atherosclerotic plaques.
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