Abstract

Recent advances in non-obstructive general angioscopy (NOGA) have enabled the detection of aortic atherosclerosis. The incidence of spontaneous ruptured aortic plaques (SRAPs) and aortic injuries was found to be high in patients diagnosed with or suspected of having coronary artery disease. These facts may result in a paradigm shift for diseases such as aging and acute aortic syndrome because the incidence of systemic embolic diseases and aortic disease are assumed be high. Aortic thromboembolism has been thought to be mainly iatrogenic and is referred to as “cholesterol embolization syndrome” or “cholesterol crystal embolization”, although the cholesterol crystals (CCs) were not demonstrated routinely as real images. Atheromatous materials, fibrins, calcifications, macrophages, and a mixture of such substances are released through a puff or puff-chandelier rupture. Among atheromatous materials, CCs can be easily detected clinically in sampled blood via polarized light microscopy. Atheromatous materials include rich CCs and free monolayers, and multilayer CCs are released when the atheromatous materials from vulnerable plaques break into pieces, such as in puff or puff-chandelier rupture. Released SRAPs seem to be asymptomatic; however, accumulation of SRAPs referred to as accumulated spontaneous asymptomatic plaques may cause aging through systemic “embolic” processes, such as mechanical obstruction and an inflammasome pathway. Unique findings in “atherosclerotic” acute aortic syndrome, such as a clear boundary between the dissected lesion and the normal lesion, fissure/fissure bleeding suggesting an entry or a reentry, and subintimal blood flow detected through NOGA are reported. Fissure/fissure bleeding and subintimal blood flow may be the first or last triggers of “atherosclerotic” acute aortic syndrome. Pre-emptive diagnosis and risk stratification of acute “atherosclerotic” aortic dissection and feedback for endovascular therapy may be enabled through the use of NOGA in the future.

Full Text
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