Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3031075 Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine 2010 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Coronary thrombosis is the most frequent final event leading to an acute coronary syndrome. In approximately two-thirds of cases, the thrombus overlies a ruptured plaque, whereas in one-third of cases it overlies an intact plaque with superficial endothelial erosion, a finding showed initially by histopathological postmortem studies and more recently confirmed by in vivo optical coherence tomography imaging. Interestingly, recent observations suggest that mechanisms leading to plaque rupture or erosion are different. In fact, in a recent study, we showed that myeloperoxidase levels in peripheral blood and expression within thrombi overlying the culprit plaque are much higher in patients with plaque erosion than in those with plaque rupture. These observations suggest that innate immunity activation is likely to play a key role, in particular, in plaque erosion and might become a therapeutic target in this subset of patients.

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