4.7 Review

Role of inflammation in atherosclerosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
Volume 48, Issue 11, Pages 1800-1815

Publisher

SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.107.038661

Keywords

inflammation; atherosclerosis; plaque vulnerability; serum markers

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Inflammation plays a major role in all phases of atherosclerosis. Stable plaques are characterized by a chronic inflammatory infiltrate, whereas vulnerable and ruptured plaques are characterized by an active inflammation involved in the thinning of the fibrous cap, predisposing the plaque to rupture. Although a single vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque rupture may cause the event, there are many other types of plaques, several of which are vulnerable. The existence of multiple types of vulnerable plaques suggests that atherosclerosis is a diffuse inflammatory process. A current challenge is to identify morphologic and molecular markers able to discriminate stable plaques from vulnerable ones, allowing the stratification of patients at high risk for acute cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events before clinical syndromes develop. With that aim in mind, this article summarizes the natural history of atherosclerotic plaques, focusing on molecular mechanisms affecting plaque progression and serum markers correlated with plaque inflammation.

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