| Literature DB >> 30705769 |
Marina Cardellini1, Valentina Rovella2, Manuel Scimeca3,4, Lucia Anemona5, Simone Bischetti4, Sara Casella5, Andrea Saggini5, Elena Bonanno5, Marta Ballanti1, Francesca Davato1, Rossella Menghini1, Arnaldo Ippoliti6, Giuseppe Santeusanio5, Nicola Di Daniele2, Massimo Federici1, Alessandro Mauriello5.
Abstract
The incidence and the different type of carotid calcifications, nodular and non-nodular, and their role in the acute cerebrovascular disease has not yet been defined. Various studies have correlated the presence of specific risk factors, in particular the chronic kidney disease, with the presence of calcification, but not with the type of calcification. Since it is likely that carotid nodular calcifications rather than those with non-nodular aspect may represent a plaque at high risk of rupture, the purpose of our study was to evaluate the role of nodular calcification in the pathogenesis of cerebrovascular syndromes and their possible correlation with specific risk factors. A total of 168 carotid plaques from symptomatic and asymptomatic patients submitted to endarterectomy, whom complete clinical and laboratory assessment of major cardiovascular risk factors was available, were studied. In 21 endarterectomies (5 from symptomatic and 16 from asymptomatic patients) an eruptive calcified nodule, consisting of calcified plates associated to a small amount of fibrous tissue without extracellular lipids and inflammatory cells, was found protruding into the lumen. Nodular calcifications were significantly observed in patients affected by chronic kidney disease (with GFR<60 ml / min / 1.73 m2), with a normal lipidic and glycemic profile. On the contrary, non-nodular calcification, mainly correlated to diabetes, were stable lesions. Results of our study suggest that the mechanisms and the clinical significance of carotid atherosclerotic calcification may be different. The nodular calcification could represent a type of unstable plaque, significantly related to chronic kidney disease, without inflammation, morphologically different from the classical vulnerable plaques.Entities:
Keywords: carotid; chronic kidney disease; histopathology; nodular calcification
Year: 2019 PMID: 30705769 PMCID: PMC6345328 DOI: 10.14336/AD.2018.0117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging Dis ISSN: 2152-5250 Impact factor: 6.745
Baseline characteristics of patients.
| Total | N = 168 |
| Age | 73.05 (8.47) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 123 (73.2%) |
| Female | 45 (26.8%) |
| Cerebrovascular disease | |
| Symptomatic patients | 42 (25.0%) |
| Ipsilateral major stroke | 21 (12.5%) |
| TIA | 21 (12.5%) |
| Asymptomatic patients | 126 (75.0%) |
| Risk factors | |
| Hypertension | 145 (86.3%) |
| Diabetes | 71 (42.3%) |
| Smoking habit | 82 (48.8%) |
| Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) (>100 mg/dL) | 65 (38.7%) |
| Low eGFR (<60mL/min per 1.73 m2) | 53 (31.5%) |
| Obesity (BMI >30 kg/m2) | 26 (15.5%) |
| Drugs | |
| Statins | 100 (59.5) |
| Diuretics | 66 (39.3) |
| Associated vascular disease | |
| Previous myocardial infarction | 34 (20.2) |
| Peripheral arterial disease | 53 (31.5) |
| Aortic aneurysm | 10 (6.0) |
| Histological type of carotid plaque | |
| Plaques with nodular calcification | 21 (12.5%) |
| Plaques with non-nodular calcification | 147 (87.5%) |
| Stable plaques | 76 (45.2%) |
| Fibroatheroma | 25 (14.9%) |
| Fibrocalcific | 51 (30.3) |
| Unstable plaques | 71 (42.3%) |
| Thrombotic plaque | 31 (18.5%) |
| TCFA | 12 (7.1%) |
| With a thrombus in organization | 28 (16.7%) |
Figure 1.Characterization of nodular calcification. A-D) Histological and ultrastructural characterization of calcifications in carotid plaques. (A) Stable fibrocalcific plaque with a linear calcification (Movat staining,2x); (B) Calcific carotid nodule protruding into the lumen consisting of calcified plates associated to a small amount of fibrous tissue without extracellular lipids, necrotic core and inflammatory cells. The fibrous cap over the nodule was extremely thin (Movat staining, 5x); (C, D) Images display a calcific nodule associated to fibrin deposition with a small superficial ulceration (C): Movat staining, 2x, D (particular of C): 6x). (E-H) Scanning electron microscopy and EDX microanalysis of carotid plaque: (E) The image shows an eruptive calcific nodule with disruption of fibrotic cap (scanning electron microscopy, 100x); (F) EDX spectrum shows that this calcific nodule is made from hydroxyapatite; (G) Linear calcification in a stable fibrocalcific carotid plaque (scanning electron microscopy, 90x); (H) EDX spectrum demonstrates that this linear calcification is made from calcium oxalate.
Nodular calcifications vs. stable fibrocalcific plaques.
| Nodular calcification N= 21 | Stable fibrocalcific plaques N = 51 | Uni variate Analysis P | Multi variate Analysis P | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, | 74.6 (11.3) | 74.2 (7.2) | 0.90 | 0.89 |
| Gender | 15 (71.4%) | 36 (70.6%) | 0.61 | 0.94 |
| Hypertension | 17 (81.0%) | 48 (94.1%) | 0.09 | 0.21 |
| Diabetes | 6 (28.6%) | 28 (54.9%) | 0.04 | 0.03 |
| Smoking habit | 9 (42.9%) | 25 (49.0%) | 0.63 | 0.37 |
| High LDL-C | 3 (14.3%) | 16 (31.4%) | 0.13 | 0.21 |
| Low eGFR | 12 (57.1%) | 16 (31.4%) | 0.04 | 0.03 |
| Obesity | 1 (4.8%) | 12 (23.5%) | 0.06 | 0.11 |
In the logistic regression value of B showed the minus sign
Correlation between nodular calcification and unstable plaques.
| Nodular calcification | Unstable inflamed plaques | Uni-variate | Multi- | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, | 74.6 (11.3) | 71.3 (8.5) | 0.16 | 0.47 |
| Gender | 15 (71.4%) | 59 (83.1%) | 0.35 | 0.04 |
| Hypertension | 19 (90.5%) | 61 (85.9%) | 0.73 | 0.83 |
| Diabetes | 6 (28.6%) | 26 (36.6%) | 0.61 | 0.20 |
| Smoking habit | 9 (42.9%) | 38 (53.5%) | 0.46 | 0.41 |
| High LDL-C | 3 (14.3%) | 36 (58.1%) | 0.005 | 0.01 |
| Low eGFR | 12 (57.1%) | 18 (25.4%) | 0.009 | 0.12 |
| Obesity | 1 (4.8%) | 10 (14.1%) | 0.45 | 0.23 |