Table 1 .
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.