Health > Cholesterol crystals may cause heart problems NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Heart attacks and strokes often
occur when plaques inside the blood vessels rupture and block
blood flow. Now, new research sheds light on how cholesterol
crystal build-up in the plaque contributes to this process. The researchers are hopeful that this information will
ultimately lead to new treatments for heart attack and stroke,
according to the report in the medical journal Clinical
Cardiology.
"As the cholesterol crystallizes, two things can happen,"
lead author Dr. George S. Abela, from Michigan State University
in East Lansing, said in a statement. "If it's a big pool of
cholesterol, it will expand and just tear the cap off the
deposit in the arterial wall. Or the crystals, which are sharp,
needle-like structures, poke their way through the membrane
covering the cholesterol deposit, like nails through wood."
Previous studies investigating how plaques rupture have
only provided a static image, the report indicates. To capture
the dynamic process, the researchers conducted two experiments
to evaluate the transformation of cholesterol from a liquid
state to a solid. In particular, they were interested in
whether the cholesterol crystals that form injure and disrupt
the plaque.
In the first experiment, the researchers measured
cholesterol crystallization in large cylinders. In the second,
the effect of crystal growth on blood vessel-like membranes was
examined.
During the experiments, the crystals grew dramatically in
size and eventually pierced the test membranes.
"So far, treatments (to prevent heart attacks and strokes)
have not been focused" on cholesterol crystallization, Abela
noted. "Now, we have a target to attack with the various
approaches we have. In the past, we've treated the various
stages that lead to this final stage, rather than preventing or
treating this final stage of the condition."
SOURCE: Clinical Cardiology, September 2005.
2005-09-03
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