Stria pinguosa
Cave: notitiae huius paginae nec praescriptiones nec consilia medica sunt. |
Striae pinguosae sunt pathologicae striae exiguae, tunicae internae arteriarum superficie, cholesteroli liberatione per cellulas spumosas in arteriae parietis tunicam internam (cholesterolosis). Quamquam tenuiter visibiles, striae flavoideae dissectione arteriae iam in oculis peritis vivant. Eae, interdum vel in pueritia oriens, signa arteriosclerosis primaria valent. Dyscoloratio flavoidea describitur irregularis.
Oriuntur striae pinguosae liberatione ab cellulis spumosis, quae sunt genus macrophagocytorum, et depositione molecularum cholesteroli intra arteriarum tunicam internam (intimam), immediate sub cellulas endotheliales aggregatum. Eo modo striae et cellulae spumosae crassitudinem et inflexibilitatem generant, arteriosclerosem dictam, at eo modo praecursores atherosclerosis, quae arterioscleroris successor fieri potest, valent[1]. Videtur, ut formatio crystallorum solidarum cholesteroli denum disruptionem laesionibus mechanicis structarum biologicarum inferunt, una cum formatio necrosis cellulis spumosis tum mortuis[2].
Consumptio kimchi holeris coreani strias pinguosas reducere potest[3].
Pinacotheca
[recensere | fontem recensere]Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]- ↑ Stary H. C., Chandler A. B., Glagov S., et al. (1994). "A Definition of Initial, Fatty Streak, and Intermediate Lesions of Atherosclerosis. A Report From the Committee on Vascular Lesions of the Council on Arteriosclerosis, American Heart Association". Circulation 89 (5): 2462-78
- ↑ Ho-Tin-Noé B., Vo S., Bayles R. (Apr 2017). "Cholesterol Crystallization in Human Atherosclerosis Is Triggered in Smooth Muscle Cells During the Transition From Fatty Streak to Fibroatheroma". The journal of pathology 241 (5): 671-82
- ↑ Woo M., Kim M., Noh J. S., et al. (Dec 2017). "Kimchi Attenuates Fatty Streak Formation in the Aorta of Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor Knockout Mice via Inhibition of Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Apoptosis". Nutrition research and practice 11 (6): 445-51