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Pathology- Unit Two
Vascular Pathology: HTN (T Pierce)
39
Medical
Professional
10/05/2009

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Cards

Term
Cardiac output is dependent on what factors
Definition
  • intravascular volume which is intimately tied to sodium regulation
Term
Peripheral resistance is controlled by what?
Definition
  • arterial lumen size, which is tightly regulated by neural and hormonal factors
Term
Two fundamental hemodynamic variables that influence blood pressure?
Definition

CO

peripheral resistance

Term
Ways kidneys regulate bp
Definition
  • RAA system
  • vasodepressor substances (ex: PG's, urinary kallikerin-kinin system, PAF, nitrate)
  • decrease GFR
    • increase sodium reabsorption at PCT
    • expands volume and CO
  • ANF- decrease sodium reabsorption at DCT, thereby decreasing CO
Term
Effects of Ang II
Definition
  • raises arterial bp by:
    • direct vasoconstriction
    • increase Ald production
  • stimulates production of endothelin, which aslo causes vasoconstriction and leads to medial hypertrophy of arteries and arterioles
  • stimulate TGFβ production, which cause progressive fibrosis seen in renal parenchyma and vessels in HTN
Term
Name the primary vascular lesions of HTN
Definition
  • intimal and medial fibrosis
  • hyaline arteriosclerosis
  • glomerulosclerosis
Term
The terminal effects of primary vascular lesions
Definition

renal insufficiency

dialysis

Term
How can you distinguish the lesions of hyaline arterioschlerosis and glomerulsclerosis from HTN as oppose to from aging?
Definition
  • HTN will cause many more sclerotic lesions than age
    • increase depends on degree and duration of HTN
    • usually, lesions appear before clinical onset of HTN
Term
Lesion most traditionally associated with HTN
Definition
hyaline atherosclerosis
Term
Morphology of hyaline arteriolsclerosis and the cause of that morphology
Definition
  • morphology- glassy pink thickening of tunica media in arterioles (may or may not be circumferential)
  • cause- insudation of proteins into the vessel wall due to elevated circumferential tension and endothelial damage
Term
Factors that cause circumferential tension
Definition
  • lumenal pressure
  • ability of smooth muscle to contract against the lumenal pressure
  • constant relating to radius cubed (Laplace's law)
    • clinical application- small changes in radius produce large changes in circumferential tension
Term
Hyaline arteriosclerosis- where do the first lesions occur? What is the state of the vasculature at this point? What purpose do the deposits serve?
Definition
  • first lesions in dilated arterioles overlying areas of attentuation in medial smooth muscle
    • lumen is not narrowed at this point and may be larger in diameter than normal arteriole
    • deposits are considered compensatory mechanism to reduce wall tension
Term
Explain, using Laplace's law, the effect of degreneration in smooth muscle
Definition
  • smooth muscle degenerated leads to increased radius (contractile mechanism is uneffective)
  • increase in radius leads to marked increase in circumferential tension
  • this will also cause increase in permeability of cells
  • proteins can now escape from subendothelial space
  • this causes lesions under microscope
Term
Intimal and medial fibroplasia morphology
Definition
  • fibroelastic tissue appearance deposited progressively on intima (tissue produced by myofibroblasts)
  • the above leads to laminated appearance
  • myofibroblasts may be visualized in the CT of the vessel
Term
Types of arteries that tend to develop intimal and medial fibroplasia
Definition
  • larger caliber arteries like arterioles and large arteries
Term
Pathology of the development of intimal and medial fibroplasia
Definition
  1. myofibroblasts produce fibroelastic tissue that is deposited into the intima
  2. at the same time myofibroblasts are depositing their tissue, medial smooth muscle cells produce increasing amounts of collagen
  3. this collagen is slowly replaced by a scar
Term
When looking at an area of intimal and medial fibroplasia, where would the worst lesions of fibroplasia be located? Explain how this happens.
Definition
  • in the areas of greatest smooth muscle atrophy
  • smooth muscles respond to excess stretch by the elaboration of collagen
Term
Potential reasons for deficits in smooth muscle that cause arterial and arteriolar lesions in HTN
Definition
  • breakdown in communication between endothelium and smooth muscle
  • increased areas of permeability
  • innate differences
Term
Ways glomerulosclerosis can manifest
Definition
  • ischemic global sclerosis with shrinkage of tuft and replacement by acellular collagen
  • focal segmental necrosis- similar to primary FSGS
Term
Major sites of damage by HTN
Definition

any tissue that has greatest share of arterial blood flow

  • heart
  • brain
  • kidneys
  • arteries themselves
Term
Ways arteries are slowly damaged by increased pressure
Definition
  • accelerates rate of formation of atherosclerosis (more specifically at the small vessels causing hyaline arteriosclerosis)
    1. direct damage to endothelial cell
    2. cell responds to endothelial injury
      1. macrophages, platelests adhere to damaged endothelium
      2. release of cytokiines lead to hyperplasia of medial smooth muscle cells
      3. smooth muscle cells migrate to tunica intima
      4. cholesterol enter smooth muscle cells and macrophages creating foam cells
      5. smooth muscle cells release cytokines that produce ECM
    3. development of fibrous cap aka plaque
  • hyaline arteriosclerosis causes narrowing of lumen and ischemic damage to tissues they supply
  • could potential cause aortic dissection
Term
Clinical application: how is arteriosclerosis visualized (histologically, retinal arteries)
Definition
  • seen in retinal arterioles via fundoscope examination
  • histologically in many organs, esp. kidney
Term
Major cause of decreased life span in HTN patients
Definition
cardiac problems
Term
Most commonly seen cardiac complication of HTN and pathophysiology
Definition
  • left ventricular hypertrophy (can also cause risk of MI, although this is not the most commonly seen cardiac problem)
  • pathophysiology
    1. body senses increased pressure and begins to grow the heart in order to adapt to increased arterial pressure
    2. increased myocardial mass requires increased oxygen delivery to heart
    3. this increased demand for oxygen becomes less feasible, and eventually leads to CHF
Term
Pathophysiology of the effect of HTN on brain
Definition
  1. gradual weakening of small arterioles, particularly in basal ganglia
  2. leads to formation of microaneurysms (Charcot-Bouchard aneurysms) that could rupture spontaneously
  3. this would cause intracerebral hemorrage
  4. this would also increase atherosclerosis which would increase risk of cerebral infarction
  5. if you progress to malignant HTN, you would cause direct bv damage that would disrupt the BBB, causing an acute edema of the brain called hypertensive encephalopathy
Term
Potential consequences of chronic HTN on kidneys
Definition

nephrosclerosis

renal failure

Term
Most common cause of secondary HTN
Definition
renovascular
Term
Two renal causes of secondary HTN
Definition
  • adult polycystic kidney disease
  • renal A. stenosis
Term
Clinical clues to adult polycystic kidney disease
Definition
  • vague abdominal pain
  • small amounts of blood in urine
  • palpably enlarged kidney in thinner patients
  • may initially come in for medical attention due to HTN
Term
Most common correctable cause of HTN
Definition
renal A. stenosis
Term
Pathogenesis of renal artery stenosis
Definition
  1. reduced blood flow to kidney
  2. activates RAAS
  3. increases Ald, leading to increase in salt and water retention
Term
Etiology of renal artery stenosis
Definition
  • in young individuals (teen-30), especially women, you will see fibromuscular dysplasia
    • deformation in wall of renal A.
    • usually one kidney is affected (unilat.)
  • in older people, esp. men, you will see atherosclerosis
    • location- ostium or the renal A. itself causing the narrowing
    • usually both kidneys affected (bilat.)
Term
clinical presentation of renal artery stenosis
Definition
  • hypokalemia (due to increased Ald), esp. when on a low salt diet
  • vascular murmor/bruit can be heard over abdomen (turbulent blood flow)
  • renal function worsen with treatment with ACE inhibitors (potential diagnositc test)
  • if atheroscleorosis the cause, HTN that is unresponsive to medication
Term
tx of renal A. stenosis
Definition
  • remove stenosis by fracturing area of narrowing with percutaneous angioplasty
    • with bilateral disease, this therapy is less curative
    • the longer renin is elevated (regardless of what type of cause it is), the more damage occurs to renal tissue and less likely surgery will be effective
    • in order to det. who benefits, measure renin conc. in renal V.
      • if gradient is >1.5 or 2:1, the surgery will likely cure the HTN
Term
morphology of arteriolonephritis aka benign nephrosclerosis
Definition
  • irregular granularity to cortical surface caused by alternating areas of preserved renal parenchyma and atrophic renal tissue
Term
definition, cause, prognosis of benign nephrosclerosis without treatment
Definition
  • definition- mult. small areas of ischemic necrosis, chararacteristically in outermost renal cortex,
  • cause- hyaline arteriosclerosis induced by HTN 
  • prognosis- cause gradual loss of functiong nephrons that leads to progressive renal insufficiency over a period of years
Term
Pathophysiological changes as malignant HTN progresses
Definition
  1. initially, high pressure cause progressive medial hyperplasia of medium sized arterioles termed hyperplastic arteriolitis
    • leads to concentric thickening of wall aka "onion skinning"
    • causes further reduction of blood flow
    • induces more renin production causing more increases in bp
  2. eventually, vascular necrosis (necrotizing arteriolitis) cause acute interuption in blood flow and areas of infarction
Term
definition and prognosis w/o tx of malignant HTN
Definition
  • def.- rapidly progressive raising of bp where kidney is target of increasing damage and cause of rapidly increasing bp
  • prognosis- fatal in 1-2 yrs
Term
tx and prognosis after tx of malignant HTN
Definition
  • tx- aggressive tx in hospital
  • prognosis after tx- breaks cycle before extensive tissue necrosis occurs
    • often successful in reversing arteriolitis and HTN
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