Journal Article10.1016/S0002-9149(77)80005-2
Pathogenesis of dissecting aneurysm of aorta: Comparative histopathologic study of significance of medial changes
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TL;DR: The fact that the aorta in patients with Marfan's syndrome shows basically the same structural alterations supports the concept proposed, that the underlying connective tissue disorder in these patients will lead to complications at an earlier age.
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Abstract: In a previous investigation of the normal aging aorta, the claimed specificity of alterations in the media in the pathogenesis of dissecting aneurysm of the aorta was challenged The concept was promoted that these changes are nonspecific and caused by general hemodynamic events within the aorta In this investigation the aortic media was studied in patients with a dilated ascending aorta, whose hemodynamic profile is known to be altered The results were compared with data obtained from the study of aortas with complete or incomplete dissection and aortas from patients with Marfan's syndrome, a condition known to predispose to dissection Only quantitative differences were found between the normal “aging” aorta and the overtly abnormal aorta The pathogenesis of dissecting aneurysm, therefore, is considered to be initiated by processes of injury and repair within the aortic wall, consequent to hemodynamic forces The histologic features of the media previously implicated as the specific underlying defect appear to represent the morphologic substrate of this traumatizing and reparative process This process may gradually lead to dilatation of the aorta and, according to Laplace's law, a vicious cycle may ensue that may lead to further complications Local circumstances determine whether a dilated aorta will rupture or whether an incomplete or complete dissection will occur The fact that the aorta in patients with Marfan's syndrome shows basically the same structural alterations supports the concept proposed The underlying connective tissue disorder in these patients will lead to complications at an earlier age Dissecting aneurysm therefore is part of a spectrum of lesions that have as a common denominator the process of injury and repair
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Citations
Risk factors for aortic dissection: A necropsy study of 161 cases
TL;DR: Among 161 necropsy cases of aortic dissection, 87 (54%) were type I, 34 (21%) type II, and 40 (25%) type III, and an intimal tear was identified in each, and the major risk factors were systemic hypertension, the Marfan syndrome, and, for type I and II dissections, congenitally bicuspid or unicommissural aorti valves.
921
Expert consensus document on the treatment of descending thoracic aortic disease using endovascular stent-grafts.
Lars G. Svensson,Nicholas T. Kouchoukos,D. Craig Miller,Joseph E. Bavaria,Joseph S. Coselli,Michael A. Curi,Holger Eggebrecht,John A. Elefteriades,Raimund Erbel,Thomas G. Gleason,Bruce W. Lytle,R. Scott Mitchell,Christoph A. Nienaber,Eric E. Roselli,Hazim J. Safi,Richard J. Shemin,Gregorio A. Sicard,Thoralf M. Sundt,Wilson Y. Szeto,Grayson H. Wheatley +19 more
TL;DR: The natural history of aortic disease, indications for repair, outcomes after conventional open surgery, currently available devices, and insights from outcomes of randomized studies using stent-grafts for abdominal aorti aneurysm surgery are reviewed; a suggestion for treatment is offered.
906
The vascular smooth muscle cell in arterial pathology: a cell that can take on multiple roles.
TL;DR: The medial VSMC is the organizer of the inwardly directed angiogenic response arising from the adventitia by overexpressing vascular endothelial growth factor in response to lipid-stimulated peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ, and probably also the organizers of the adventitial immune response by secreting chemokines.
697
Penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers of the thoracic aorta: natural history and clinicopathologic correlations.
Anthony W. Stanson,Francis J. Kazmier,Larry H. Hollier,William D. Edwards,Peter C. Pairolero,Patrick F. Sheedy,John W. Joyce,Michaël C. Johnson +7 more
TL;DR: Hallmarks of findings on aortography and CT scan include the presence of the ulcer and an intramural hematoma and the potentially progressive and serious nature of this condition may remain unappreciated.
574
Aortic dissection: Anatomy, consequences, and causes
TL;DR: All aortic dissections are characterized by separation of their media in a course parallel to that of the flow of blood, and a continuous more or less transverse intimal and medial tear is identified in all but a few patients.
521
References
Histologic changes in the normal aging aorta: Implications for dissecting aortic aneurysm
TL;DR: Findings in the normal aging aorta reveal that none of the histologic changes observed can be regarded as the specific structural alteration responsible for the development of dissecting aneurysm.
503
Cystic Medial Necrosis of the Ascending Aorta in Relation to Age and Hypertension
TL;DR: The presence of cystic medial necrosis in the human ascending thoracic aorta was determined by histologic examination in a series of 250 necropsies by grading the severity of lesions according to the amount of basophilic ground substance and fragmentation of elastic tissue.
192
Spontaneous Laceration of Ascending Aorta
TL;DR: Spontaneous laceration of the ascending aorta may result in through-and-through lacerations causing hemopericardium, limited intramural dissection of blood (incomplete dissecting aneurysm), or (3) classical dissecting aortic stenosis.
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