What is Cardiovascular Disease.

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What is Cardiovascular Disease

How may it be prevented and to what extent is heart transplant surgery a sensible solution to the problem of Coronary Heart Disease?

Cardiovascular Disease, or CVD, is Britains biggest killer, responsible for 40% of premature deaths in Britain.

CVD is a comprehensive term for several afflictions of the cardiovascular system - the heart and blood vessels of the body. These afflictions are Coronary Heart Disease (CHD), Atherosclerosis and arteriosclerosis, Angina, Coronary Thrombosis and Myocardial Infarction and Stroke.

Apart from the high mortality rate - it is estimated that CVD kills 140,000 people a year under 75 years old, chronic heart disease causes incapacitation, suffering and pain in many of it's victims. Much heart disease is also self-inflicted and therefore avoidable.

Atherosclerosis and Arteriosclerosis

The underlying cause of CHD, strokes and other diseases of the blood vessels is usually atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis is caused by the build up of cholesterol and other fatty substances in walls of arteries. Firstly the deposits form small streaks on the endothelium of the artery, but gradually build up to form patches known as atheromatous plaques. The deposit is called an atheroma and causes the arterial walls to thicken, hence narrowing the lumen of the artery.

The onset of an atheromatous plaque may be caused by some physical damage to the artery, sometimes caused by high arterial pressure - hypertension. Smooth muscle cells proliferate at the site of damage and then lipids and cholesterol are deposited from the blood. The cholesterol deposited in the walls may be attacked by free radicals released by phagocytes which may slow down the passage of low density lipoproteins which carry cholesterol back into the blood with the result of increased deposition of cholesterol.

Atheromatous plaques roughen the lining of the artery and disturb the flow of blood, which can stimulate the formation of a clot known as a thrombus. When blood comes into contact with fatty and fibrous tissue, platelets stick to the roughened surface and release clotting factors called thromboxanes. In healthy arteries the amount of thromboxane and prostaglandin is balanced, but in damaged arteries the balance is upset because the endothelial cells lining the artery are damaged so blood clots form.

This can block the blood vessel it is forming in, or small pieces known as emboli can break off and travel through the blood vessels and jam at any narrow point in the system, causing a restriction of blood flow to the affected area.

Another process - arteriosclerosis is also associated with atherosclerosis. Arteriosclerosis is the deposition of fibrous sediments in damaged areas and calcium is also deposited, leading to calcified plaques. Fibrosis and calcification cause the artery wall to harden and loose it's elasticity. These hardened arteries are more prone to rupture and are also liable to initiate development of a thrombus, particularly if the atheroma breaks through the endothelium of the blood vessel.

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The artery walls become weakened by plaque, if the weakness causes the artery to stretch the artery may rupture causing a haemorrhage known as an aneurysm.

Diagram showing how atheromatous plaques can cause a blood clot to form.

Coronary Heart Disease (CHD)

CHD, also known as Ischaemic Heart Disease (ischaema - reduction of blood supply to a tissue) is a disease of the two coronary arteries supplying the heart muscles with oxygenated blood and nutrients. CHD causes damage to these arteries by blocking the lumen of the vessels with plaques which leads to damage to the heart as it becomes ...

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