10 research outputs found

    Histopathological Features of Aspirated Thrombi after Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Patients with ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction

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    BACKGROUND: Plaque disruption with superimposed thrombus is the predominant mechanism responsible for the onset of acute coronary syndromes. Studies have shown that plaque disruption and thrombotic occlusion are frequently separated in time. We established the histopathological characteristics of material aspirated during primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in a large consecutive ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) population. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Thrombus aspiration during primary PCI was performed in 1,362 STEMI patients. Thrombus age was classified as fresh (<1 day), lytic (1-5 days), or organized (>5 day). Further, the presence of plaque was documented. The histopathological findings were related to the clinical, angiographic, and procedural characteristics. Material could be aspirated in 1,009 patients (74%). Components of plaque were found in 395 of these patients (39%). Fresh thrombus was found in 577 of 959 patients (60%) compared to 382 patients (40%) with lytic or organized thrombi. Distal embolization was present in 21% of patients with lytic thrombus compared to 12% and 15% of patients with fresh or organized thrombus. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Material could be obtained in 74% of STEMI patients treated with thrombus aspiration during primary PCI. In 40% of patients thrombus age is older than 24 h, indicating that plaque disruption and thrombus formation occur significantly earlier than the onset of symptoms in many patients

    Anti-human Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) Antibody Selection for Immunohistochemical Staining of Proliferating Blood Vessels

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    Nine commercially available vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) antibodies were investigated for their ability to immunostain vascular malformations (VMs) with or without immature capillary proliferation. First, all antibodies were optimized for their performance in IHC, with placenta and colon adenocarcinoma as positive control tissues. Five antibodies were regarded as unfit for VEGF immunostaining based on poor immunostaining criteria. Subsequently, Western blot analysis using VEGF rabbit polyclonal antibody (Thermo RB-9031) revealed a clear 45-kDa band in tissue extracts from VMs with immature capillary proliferation and a high Ki67-labeling index, whereas tissue extracts from mature VMs without microvascular proliferation and no Ki67-labeling index demonstrated only a very weak 45-kDa band. In contrast, two VEGF antibodies, including the popular Santa Cruz A-20, revealed bands at 45 kDa of similar intensity in tissue extracts from both types of VMs. Staining characteristics of the 45-kDa band were reflected in the results obtained in IHC. (J Histochem Cytochem 58:109–118, 2010

    Microvascular endoglin (CD105) expression correlates with tissue markers for atherosclerotic plaque vulnerability in an ageing population with multivessel coronary artery disease

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    Li X, van der Meer J J, van der Loos C M, Ploegmakers H J P, de Boer O J, de Winter R J & van der Wal A C ?(2012) Histopathology similar to 61, 8897 Microvascular endoglin (CD105) expression correlates with tissue markers for atherosclerotic plaque vulnerability in an ageing population with multivessel coronary artery disease Aims: Vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques are lesions with a high propensity to develop plaque disruption and superimposed thrombosis. No systematic studies have been carried out on tissue markers for plaque vulnerability throughout the entire coronary artery system at the end stages of coronary atherosclerosis. Methods and results: Nine autopsied patients (mean age 77 years) with angiographically severe trivascular coronary atherosclerosis were selected for this study. All visible lesions in postmortem coronary angiograms (n = 125) were histologically and immunohistochemically screened for the presence of intraplaque haemorrhages (activated) microvessels and inflammatory infiltrates. Intraplaque haemorrhages were observed in 76/125 plaques (61%). Chronic inflammation was found superficially in 59/125 plaques (47%) and deeply inside the plaque tissue in 103/125 plaques (83%). Microvessels were found in 100/125 lesions (80%), of which 58% showed endothelial expression of the vascular activation marker CD105. Moreover, microvascular CD105 positivity correlated positively with plaque haemorrhage and deeply seated plaque inflammation. Conclusions: Plaque inflammation and haemorrhages can be found at a high frequency throughout the coronary artery system of elderly patients with multivessel coronary atherosclerosis. Microvascular expression of endoglin (CD105), which correlates positively with both of these features of plaque vulnerability, can serve as a marker of the risk of developing coronary thrombotic complication

    Neutrophils, neutrophil extracellular traps and interleukin-17 associate with the organisation of thrombi in acute myocardial infarction

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    Neutrophils are important cellular sources of interleukin (IL) 17A and -F. Moreover, upon activation neutrophils are able to excrete chromatin embedded with components from their cytoplasmic granules to form 'neutrophil extracellular traps' (NETs). Recent studies suggested that NETs contribute to thrombosis by promoting fibrin deposition and platelet aggregation. IL17A may also promote thrombosis by enhancing platelet aggregation. In the present study we investigated the presence of neutrophils, NETs and IL17A and -F in coronary thrombosuction specimens obtained from patients after acute myocardial infarction. Neutrophils and NETs were identified using histochemical (HE, Feulgen procedure) and immunohistochemical stainings (Histone H1, myeloperoxidase, neutrophil elastase) in 15 fresh, 15 lytic and 15 organised thrombi. The presence and distribution of IL17A and -F was studied using (immuno)histochemical double staining and spectral image analysis, rtPCR and Western blot. High numbers of neutrophils are present (10-30% of the thrombus mass) in fresh and lytic, but not in organized thrombus. NETs were frequently observed in fresh (4/15) and lytic (12/15), but never in organised thrombus specimens. Double staining combining the Feulgen reaction with Histone-H1, MPO or neutrophil elastase confirmed colocalisation with DNA. Cytoplasmatic IL17A/F staining was found in the majority of the neutrophils, extracellularly and in NETs. Western blotting confirmed the presence of IL17A and IL17F in thrombus specimens. In conclusion, a large burden of neutrophils, neutrophil extracellular traps and IL17A and -F are important constituents of fresh and lytic thrombus after acute myocardial infarction. The specific colocalisation of these indicates a role during thrombus stabilisation and growt

    Demographical and histopathological characteristics of the patients and nephrectomy specimens.

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    <p>*not interpretable: no renal cortex present in the available tissue blocks to determine Banff score;</p><p>**: C4d not interpretable because of extensive haemorrhage.</p

    Clinical, angiographic and procedural characteristics of the 959 patients with classifiable material.

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    <p>Continous variables are presented as means and standard deviations and categorical data are presented as frequencies (counts) and percentages.</p><p>LAD = left anterior descending coronary artery; TIMI = Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction; § = By visual assessment by the operator; † = Time between onset of symptoms and needle time; ‡ = According to the ACC-AHA classification.</p

    Clinical, angiographic and procedural characteristics of the 1,362 patients treated with thrombus aspiration during primary PCI.

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    <p>Continous variables are presented as means and standard deviations and categorical data are presented as frequencies (counts) and percentages.</p><p>LAD = left anterior descending coronary artery; TIMI = Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction; § = By visual assessment by the operator; † = Time between onset of symptoms and needle time; ‡ = According to the ACC-AHA classification.</p

    Spatial Differences in the Presence of FOXP3+ and GranzymeB+ T Cells between the Intra- and Extravascular Compartments in Renal Allograft Vasculopathy

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    BACKGROUND: Allograft vasculopathy (AV) and native atherosclerosis (NA) share the presence of a T-cell mediated inflammatory response, but differ in overall plaque morphology and growth rate. We studied the distribution and frequency of regulatory- and cytotoxic T cells in the arterial intima lesions in both conditions. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The study is based on vessels of 15 explanted human renal allografts with AV and 10 carotid artery plaques obtained at surgery. Distribution and frequency of cytotoxic- and regulatory T cells, as identified by the expression of Granzyme B (GrB) and FOXP3 was established in NA and AV. Furthermore, we compared the distribution of these cells in AV with the perivascular, interstitial renal tissue using immunohistochemistry. The total number of T cells was much higher in AV than in NA lesions (711±135 and 37±8 CD3/mm(2) respectively, p<0.005, mean, ± SEM). Total numbers of FOXP3(+) regulatory cells were also significantly increased in AV (36±10 and 0.9±0.3 FOXP3(+)/mm(2) p<0.05), but relative numbers, expressed as a percentage of the total number of CD3(+) T cells ((FOXP3(+)/CD3(+)) ×100), were not significantly different (4.6%±0.9 and 2.7%±0.6). GrB(+) cells were rare in NA, but significantly increased numbers of GrB(+) cells were found in AV lesions (85±24 and 0.2±0.1 GrB(+)/mm(2), p<0.05). Perivascular tissues in the allografts showed a higher relative frequency of FOXP3(+) cells than adjacent intimal lesions (14.0%±2.7 and 4.6%±0.9, respectively, p<0.05), but a lower frequency of GrB(+) cytotoxic T cells (16.1%±2.7 and 22.6%±3.6, p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Similar to NA, AV is characterized by a low frequency of intimal FOXP3(+) regulatory T cells. Moreover, significant spatial differences exist in the distribution of functional T cell subsets between the intra- and extravascular micro-environments of the graft
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