Abstract

This study was conducted to assess the relationship between adventitial vasa vasorum neovascularization (VVn) in femoral artery of type 2 diabetic patients with macroangiopathy and the recruitment of macrophages and lymphocytes, and to relate the density of VVn to the occurrence of cardiovascular events. Femoral artery samples were obtained from amputation cases. A total of 55 type 2 diabetic patients with macroangiopathy, 15 autopsy cases with type 2 diabetes without atherosclerosis. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining to observe the histopathological features; Victoria blue staining to analyze the histological features; immunohistochemistry (CD34, CD68, CD20, and CD3) to determine the VVn density and the expression of macrophages, B lymphocytes, and T lymphocytes. Type 2 diabetic patients with macroangiopathy showed a higher mean adventitial VVn density in femoral artery (48.40 ± 9.39 no./mm2) than patients with type 2 diabetes without atherosclerosis (19.75 ± 6.28 no./mm2) (p < 0.01). In addition, the VVn density was positively associated with the expression of CD68 macrophages (r = 0.62, p < 0.01) and CD20 B lymphocytes (r = 0.59, p < 0.01). Type 2 diabetic patients with high VVn density showed more adverse cardiovascular events (27/35 vs. 8/20 events, p = 0.006). In multivariable analysis adjusted for main risk factors for cardiovascular disease, VVn was still independently associated with adverse cardiovascular events (p = 0.01). VVn density in type 2 diabetic patients with macroangiopathy is positively correlated with the adventitial immune-inflammatory cell numbers and the development of atherosclerotic lesions. Furthermore, VVn density is associated with adverse cardiovascular events.

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