Sunday, August 24, 2008
Animal models of spontaneous plaque rupture: The holy grail of experimental atherosclerosis research
Abstract  Throughout the history of atherosclerosis research we have sought animal models of the disease process that exhibit high frequencies         of the features that make human plaque a clinical risk: plaque rupture, mural thrombosis, and intra-plaque hemorrhage. This         type of model is needed to determine the mechanisms by which plaques rupture and to design and test therapeutic interventions         for stabilizing plaques. Studies of domestic and exotic animals have shown that most species will spontaneously develop fatty         streaks and in some cases atheromatous lesions with sufficient time, but that rupture and thrombosis is exceedingly rare.         Even with addition of fat and cholesterol to the diet, lesion development is accelerated but does not increase the frequency         with which plaques rupture in most animal models. However, recently we have observed high frequencies of intra-plaque hemorrhage         in the innominate/brachiocephalic arteries of older, chow-fed, hyperlipidemic, apolipoprotein E-deficient mice, and high frequencies         of plaque rupture with mural thrombus in younger apolipoprotein E-deficient mice fed a high-fat diet. This suggests that plaque         rupture and secondary thrombosis are frequent and reproducible occurrences at specific sites in apolipoprotein E-deficient         mice, and that the timing and pathobiology of the ruptures are influenced by lipid status in this murine model.
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