» Articles » PMID: 38592807

Intimomedial Tears of the Aorta Heal by Smooth Muscle Cell-mediated Fibrosis Without Atherosclerosis

Overview
Journal JCI Insight
Date 2024 Apr 9
PMID 38592807
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

BACKGROUNDDisease of the aorta varies from atherosclerosis to aneurysms, with complications including rupture, dissection, and poorly characterized limited tears. We studied limited tears without any mural hematoma, termed intimomedial tears, to gain insight into aortic vulnerability to excessive wall stresses. Our premise is that minimal injuries in aortas with sufficient medial resilience to prevent tear progression correspond to initial mechanisms leading to complete structural failure in aortas with significantly compromised medial resilience.METHODSIntimomedial tears were macroscopically identified in 9 of 108 ascending aortas after surgery and analyzed by histology and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy.RESULTSNonhemorrhagic, nonatheromatous tears correlated with advanced aneurysmal disease and most lacked distinctive symptoms or radiological signs. Tears traversed the intima and part of the subjacent media, while the resultant defects were partially or completely filled with neointima characterized by differentiated smooth muscle cells, scattered leukocytes, dense fibrosis, and absent elastic laminae despite tropoelastin synthesis. Healed lesions contained organized fibrin at tear edges without evidence of plasma and erythrocyte extravasation or lipid accumulation.CONCLUSIONThese findings suggest a multiphasic model of aortic wall failure in which primary lesions of intimomedial tears either heal if the media is sufficiently resilient or progress as dissection or rupture by medial delamination and tear completion, respectively. Moreover, mural incorporation of thrombus and cellular responses to injury, two historically important concepts in atheroma pathogenesis, contribute to vessel wall repair with adequate conduit function, but even together are not sufficient to induce atherosclerosis.FUNDINGNIH (R01-HL146723, R01-HL168473) and Yale Department of Surgery.

References
1.
Roberts W, Honig H . The spectrum of cardiovascular disease in the Marfan syndrome: a clinico-morphologic study of 18 necropsy patients and comparison to 151 previously reported necropsy patients. Am Heart J. 1982; 104(1):115-35. DOI: 10.1016/0002-8703(82)90650-0. View

2.
Grewal N, Dolmaci O, Jansen E, Klautz R, Driessen A, Lindeman J . Are acute type A aortic dissections atherosclerotic?. Front Cardiovasc Med. 2023; 9:1032755. PMC: 9868270. DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2022.1032755. View

3.
Minelli S, Minelli P, Montinari M . Reflections on Atherosclerosis: Lesson from the Past and Future Research Directions. J Multidiscip Healthc. 2020; 13:621-633. PMC: 7398886. DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S254016. View

4.
Hiratzka L, Bakris G, Beckman J, Bersin R, Carr V, Casey Jr D . 2010 ACCF/AHA/AATS/ACR/ASA/SCA/SCAI/SIR/STS/SVM guidelines for the diagnosis and management of patients with Thoracic Aortic Disease: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice.... Circulation. 2010; 121(13):e266-369. DOI: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e3181d4739e. View

5.
Nikolic S, Atanasejevic T, Popovic V . [Cardiac tamponade due to rupture of healed and sealed aortic intimomedial tear--case report]. Srp Arh Celok Lek. 2007; 135(3-4):212-5. DOI: 10.2298/sarh0704212n. View