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Pathophysiology of Brain & Body USSJJQ-20-3 Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) & Stroke CardiovascularDisease (CVD) Diseases of the heart and circulatory system Main cause of death in the UK Main forms of CVD are Coronary Heart (or Artery) Disease (CHD or CAD) and Stroke ~ half of deaths from CVD are from CHD (80,500 deaths in UK in 2010) ~ quarter are from stroke CHD most common single cause of death in the UK 179,000 deaths from CVD in 2010 (32% of total) 1 in 6 men and 1 in 8 women 17% of premature deaths in men and 8% in women (20,000 premature deaths, <75 years) Other forms of circulatory disease caused around 50,000 deaths in the UK in 2010 CHD/CAD aka Ischaemic Heart Disease (IHD) Blood flow obstruction Atheroma, Thrombosis, Embolism Diminished coronary perfusion Compromised myocardial function Ischaemia Angina Infarction Necrosis Inflammation Granulation tissue Fibrous scarring Myocardial Ischaemia Extent/timescale of compromised blood flow spectrum of presentation (increasingly ‘acute’) silent ischaemia ( cumulative damage/stress?) exertion-induced angina (‘stable’) unstable angina (seemingly random occurrence) acute myocardial infarction (AMI/MI/‘heart attack’) Last two termed Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) Characterised by the common involvement of an atherosclerotic plaque Tends to affect systolic (ie pumping) function ~ 110,000 admissions/year in UK Coronary Atherosclerosis – common sites •Left Coronary Artery •Anterior Descending (LAD) •Left Circumflex (LCx) LCx •Right Coronary Artery •Risk factors – Hypertension, Diabetes & Smoking, Life style, Diet, Hypercholesterolemia Male, Age, Genetic LAD Deaths / 100 pts / month Cumulative 6-month mortality from Ischaemic Heart Disease N = 21,761; 1985-1992 Diagnosis on adm to hosp Duke Cardiovascular Database 25 20 15 Acute MI Unstable angina Stable angina 10 5 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Months after hospital admission • Patients with ischaemic discomfort may present with or without ST segment elevation on the ECG (STEMI) • ST-segment elevation usually a Q-wave MI (QwMI) • Non-ST-segment elevation is either unstable angina or a non–St segment elevation MI (NSTEMI) Atheroma - Coronary Artery Atheroma - Coronary Artery Calcification Atheroma with Thrombosis Coronary Atherosclerosis with Thrombosis Normal Myocardium MI 18-24 h loss of nucleus, striations, coagulation necrosis Old ‘healed’ MI - Collagen Scar MI – Collagen Scar Complications Arrhythmias/conduction defects Extension of infarction, or re-infarction Congestive heart failure Cardiogenic shock embolisation Myocardial wall rupture Due to low BP Mural thrombosis Due to reduction in functioning muscle Tamponade (fluid in pericardial sac) Papillary muscle rupture, ventricular aneurysm MI - Rupture MI - Aneurysm MI Pain • Severe chest pain is the usual main symptom • May travel… • Into jaw • down left arm • down both arms • Sweating, nausea, feel faint Reperfusion Strategies Treatment Overview Reperfusion Strategies Stroke : Introduction A sudden onset of focal neurological deficit with signs and symptoms lasting greater than 24 hours (or resulting in death) where the cause is thought to be vascular (WHO) <24 h is a Transient Ischaemic Attack (TIA) UK 150,000 strokes/year in UK (50,000 deaths) 1 every 3 minutes 1,000 people under 30 rd commonest specific cause of death 3 Most common cause of disability 250,000 living with disability caused by stroke Stroke : Introduction USA 600,000 - 700,000 people in the US have a stroke each year 3rd leading cause of death (after CHD and cancer) Incidence to double in 50 years (ageing population)? 10% of strokes are immediately fatal 25% of stroke victims die within one year 25% recover fully Remainder have varying degrees of disabilities 55% within 5 years Most common cause of disability in adults Direct Costs of Stroke totals $28.3 Billion/yr Total Costs of Stroke totals $43.3 Billion/yr Stroke : 10% of all-cause mortality Tuberculosis Diarrhoea Perinatal causes 3% Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 5% HIV/AIDS Respiratory infections 3% Malaria 2% Other causes 4% 27% 5% 7% Coronary heart disease 9% Accidents Stroke 10% Cancer 13% 12% 1.0–2.0/1,000 people in USA 2.0–2.5/1,000 in Western Europe 3.0–3.5/1,000 in Eastern Europe American Stroke AssociationHeart . Disease and Stroke Statistics 2004 Stroke : Risk Factors Non- modifiable Race - e.g Afro-Americans increased risk Inherited - family history of stroke History of stroke or myocardial infarction Age... 14 12 Men Women % of population 12,0 11,5 10 8 6,6 6,3 6 4 2 3,1 3,0 2,1 0,4 0,3 1,1 0,8 1,2 35-44 45-54 0 20-34 55-64 65-74 75+ Age NHANES: 1999-2002 CDC/NCHS and NHLBI Stroke : Risk Factors Modifiable Major Hypertension Diabetes Dyslipidaemia Smoking Risk for embolic events in heart/carotid disease Other Obesity; Insulin resistance; Decreased physical activity; Increased alcohol consumption; Heart disease (CHD, CHF); Vasculitis; Migraine; Hypothyroidism; Sleep apnoea syndrome; Haematological disorders (Hypercoagulation or emboli); Predisposition for thrombotic events (Hyperhomocysteinemia, female hormones). 10yr Stroke Risk, Adults 55 yr old according to basic Risk Factors Estimated 10-Year Rate (%) (Framingham Heart Study) 30 27 25 22.4 19.1 20 14.8 15 8.4 10 5 2.6 6.3 5.4 4 3.5 2 1.1 0 A B C Men Systolic BP Diabetes Smoking Previous Atr Fib Previous CVD D E F Women A B C D E F 95-105 130-148 130-148 130-148 130-148 130-148 mmHg no no yes yes yes yes no no yes yes yes yes no no no no yes yes no no no no no yes Stroke 1991;22:312-318 Stroke : Types Ischaemic Lack of circulating blood deprives the neurones of oxygen/nourishment Thrombotic Embolic Global, Hypotensive Haemorrhagic Extravascular release of blood local or generalised pressure injury Intracerebral (within the brain) Subarachnoid (between the brain and the skull) Stroke : Ischaemic vs Haemorrhagic • Incidence – • 88% (Ischaemic) vs 12% (Haemorrhagic) • 30-day mortality – • 10% (Ischaemic) vs 35% (Haemorrhagic) Stroke : Ischaemic vs Haemorrhagic Acute Ischaemic Injury Occlusion of a large vessel (such as MCA) is rarely complete Progression and extent of ischaemic injury… Effect on Cerebral Blood Flow (CBF) depends on the degree of obstruction, and collateral circulation Rate & duration of the ischaemic event Collateral circulation in the involved area of the brain Systemic circulation & arterial blood pressure Coagulation abnormalities Temperature Glucose At macroscopic tissue level, can think of... CBF & Ischaemic Thresholds Ischaemic Penumbra and Window of Opportunity Macroscopic Factors CBF & Ischemic Thresholds Normal CBF 50-60 ml/100g/min Varies in different regions of the brain CBF 20-30ml/100g/min Loss of electrical activity CBF 10 ml/100g/min Neuronal death Ischaemic Penumbra & Window of Opportunity Ischaemic zone surrounds central core of infarction CBF 25% to 50% normal and loss of blood flow autoregulation Viability of that brain tissue preserved if perfusion is restored within 2 to 4 hours? Microscopic Injury Mechanisms Development of microcirculatory disturbances Excitotoxicity Formation of micro thrombi Accumulation of noxious metabolites Interaction of endothelial cells with neutrophils & platelets Neutrophils trigger neuronal necrosis Ischaemia depletion of neuronal energy stores failure of active membrane ion pumps increased extracellular glutamate (+ aspartate) opening of Ca++ channels influx of Ca++, Na+ and Cl- and efflux of K+ irreversible neuronal damage Apoptosis triggered by ischaemia, ~ 2 hours Coagulation Necrosis, evolves over 6 - 12 hours physical/chemical/osmotic damage to cell memb Haemodynamic Crisis: ‘Hypotensive Stroke’ An event causing abrupt drop in blood pressure results in critical compromise of CBF and cerebral perfusion Sites affected by critically low CBF are located at the end of an arterial tree Hence the term “watershed or boundary zone infarct” Hippocampus, Cerebral/ Cerebellar cortexes sensitive Abundance of glutamate Complications of Restoring Blood Flow Arterial occlusion causes ischaemia of vascular walls in addition to effects on neurones Hemorrhage (red infarcts) result when the fragile “ischaemic” or “injured” vessels rupture after sudden restoration of blood flow Vasogenic oedema can also occur following sudden restoration of blood flow to an ischaemic area Disruption of BBB increased permeability