Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
Although the advances have been made in the detection and treatment
of vascular diseases, myocardial infarctions and strokes often strike
apparently healthy persons without warning and produce disabilities or death.
Atherosclerosis is the underlying cause of most heart attacks and strokes.
Atherosclerotic plaques can grow slowly over time and gradually block blood
flow, often producing symptoms that warn the patient of the underlying disease.
However, less occlusive plaques can produce acute events within minutes by
rupturing and abruptly forming an occlusive thrombus. These plaques appear to
have certain physical characteristics, such as a thin fibrous cap and
lipid-rich core, which distinguish them from less dangerous plaques. There is
new urgency to evaluate vascular disease in humans by imaging methods that
provide data about the ultrastructure of plaques, rather than invasive methods
such as angiography that report only luminal narrowing. This project uses the
modified Constantinides animal (rabbit) model of plaque rupture to compare
plaque components and ultrastructure in non-ruptured and ruptured plaques.
Magnetic resonance (MR) images of the aorta in rabbits (in vivo) will be
obtained before and after triggering plaque rupture, and 9with higher
resolution) after excision. Comparison of the MR images of ruptured and
non-ruptured plaques will provide markers for plaque rupture and determine the
value of MR imaging for predicting vulnerable plaques will provide markers for
plaque rupture and determine the value of MR imaging for predicting vulnerable
plaques in humans before rupture occurs. Magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR
spectroscopy will be used to characterize in situ the composition of each lipid
phase in excised plaques. MAS NMR allows quantitation of crystalline
cholesterol, liquid and liquid-crystalline cholesteryl esters, and calcium
salts in the intact plaque; each of these structures alone, or interactions
between them, may play a role in plaque vulnerability. To enhance the
interpretation of MR images, the detailed physical chemical information from
MAS NMR will be integrated with the spatial information about lipid and protein
components determined by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and light
microscopy/histology. Because the ultrastructure of plaques appears to be key
to their stability and potential for regression, MR imaging has the potential
for being a more reliable predictor of acute pathological events (heart attack
and stroke).
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01HL061825-03
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