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. 2003 Oct;89(10):1262–1267. doi: 10.1136/heart.89.10.1262

Table 1 .

Modified American Heart Association classification based on morphological description

Description Thrombosis
Non-atherosclerotic intimal lesions
Intimal thickening The normal accumulation of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in the intima in the absence of lipid or macrophage foam cells Absent
Intimal xanthoma, or “fatty streak” Luminal accumulation of foam cells without a necrotic core or fibrous cap. Based on animal and human data, such lesions usually regress. Absent
Progressive atherosclerotic lesions
Pathological intimal thickening SMCs in a proteoglycan-rich matrix with areas of extracellular lipid accumulation without necrosis Absent
Erosion Luminal thrombosis; plaque same as above Thrombus mostly mural and infrequently occlusive
Fibrous cap atheroma Well formed necrotic core with an overlying fibrous cap Absent
Erosion Luminal thrombosis; plaque same as above; no communication of thrombus with necrotic core Thrombus mostly mural and infrequently occlusive
Thin fibrous cap atheroma A thin fibrous cap infiltrated by macrophages and lymphocytes with rare SMCs and an underlying necrotic core Absent; may contain intraplaque haemorrhage/fibrin
Plaque rupture Fibroatheroma with cap disruption; luminal thrombus communicates with the underlying necrotic core Thrombus usually occlusive
Calcified nodule Eruptive nodular calcification with underlying fibrocalcific plaque Thrombus usually non-occlusive
Fibrocalcific plaque Collagen-rich plaque with significant stenosis usually contains large areas of calcification with few inflammatory cells; a necrotic core may be present Absent

Reproduced from Virmani et al,4 with permission.