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General and Systemic Histopathology, C601&C602
     
    Slide 3: Coronary artery with atherosclerosis

    These pictures pretty much say it all.  Look how markedly narrowed the lumen is in some of these serial sections.  You can easily see the calcium deposits in some of the plaques.  Obviously it wouldn't take much to fully occlude the lumen in several of these sections.

    Here's another section of a thrombosed coronary

    This picture is of only a small portion of the vessel wall. Note the calcium in the atherosclerotic plaque (blue crystals), and the "cholesterol slits." The plaque has a complex structure and starts out as an intimal lesion. Other conditions can have calcium deposits in the walls of vessels, but the deposits of an atheroma occur in the subendothelium. If thrombus should form on the surface of the plaque, the vessel will become completely occluded. Sometimes the material of the plaque can "embolize" i.e. break free and head down stream, causing small vessel arterial occlusion at a location distant from the plaque itself.


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