Abstract

Neovascularization is observed in complicated atherosclerotic plaques associated with cellular proliferation, plaque hemorrhage, and thrombosis. The angiogenic activity of 278 plaque fragments was tested; the fragments were taken from 12 patients with cerebral ischemia who underwent carotid endarterectomy. Angiogenesis, determined by the sustained ingrowth of new vessels in the rabbit cornea, was induced in 125 (45%) of these fragments. By contrast, angiogenesis was found in only two (2.4%) of 80 control tissues (p less than 0.001): in none of 22 samples of boiled atherosclerotic plaque; in two of 26 samples of normal rabbit carotid artery; and in none of 32 samples of nonatherosclerotic human uterine artery. Histological evaluation revealed that the cellular zones (composed mainly of smooth-muscle cells) were highly angiogenic, with 97 (76%) of 127 samples showing angiogenesis compared with 23 (17%) of 132 acellular fragments that consisted of amorphic, necrotic, calcific, lipid-laden material (p less than 0.001). These results indicate that angiogenesis in vivo is a function of the cellular component of the advanced atherosclerotic plaque, and is not expressed in the normal, stable arterial wall. The fragile new vessels could promote the growth of the plaque or be a source of hemorrhages, microinfarcts, and plaque fissures that convert a stable, silent lesion to an expanding, ulcerated, thrombotic, symptomatic plaque.

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