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1 plaques with a low-signal intensity core and fibrous cap.
2 atrix that provides physical strength to the fibrous cap.
3 th macrophages in both the necrotic core and fibrous cap.
4 rast enhancement improves delineation of the fibrous cap.
5 nvestment and/or retention in the protective fibrous cap.
6 nd by lumen-derived microvessels through the fibrous cap.
7 ome thrombi may occur without rupture of the fibrous cap.
8 ia compared with fibrous plaque or an intact fibrous cap.
9 ty by increasing the collagen content of the fibrous cap.
10 id core, many inflammatory cells, and a thin fibrous cap.
11 in the normal media as well as the plaque's fibrous cap.
12 evaluate therapy intended to "stabilize" the fibrous cap.
13 ruptured area of the plaques but not in the fibrous cap.
14 sis by favoring collagen accumulation in the fibrous cap.
15 agenous extracellular matrix of the plaque's fibrous cap.
16 plaque that had undergone ulceration of its fibrous cap.
17 that can contribute to the weakening of the fibrous cap.
18 icial, for example preventing rupture of the fibrous cap.
19 and increased differentiation of SMCs in the fibrous cap.
20 behavior and provide tensile strength to the fibrous cap.
21 the formation or maintenance of a protective fibrous cap.
22 lipid core, intensive inflammation and thin fibrous cap.
23 an underlying necrotic core with a ruptured fibrous cap.
24 he use of OCT for identifying macrophages in fibrous caps.
25 les the quantification of macrophages within fibrous caps.
26 nt resolution to identify thin (< 65 microm) fibrous caps.
27 plaque burden, large lipid content, and thin fibrous caps.
28 vealed a distinct localization of miR-210 in fibrous caps.
29 improved lesional efferocytosis, and thicker fibrous caps.
30 s of regional formation of plaques with thin fibrous caps.
31 plaques in segments with low ESS had thinner fibrous cap (115 mum [63-166] versus 170 mum [107-219];
32 sus 853.4 +/- 570.8, P<0.001), and a thinner fibrous cap (70.2 +/- 20.2 microm versus 103.3 +/- 46.8
33 ologically characterized by a thin, inflamed fibrous cap, a dense lipid core, and mural thrombus.
35 osis, increased plaque necrosis, and thinner fibrous caps - all signs of vulnerable plaques in humans
37 a measure of the mechanical fidelity of the fibrous cap and can enable the identification of high-ri
39 in lipid-rich plaques with rupture of a thin fibrous cap and contact of the thrombus with a pool of e
46 th alpha smooth muscle actin (aSma)-positive fibrous cap and Mac3-expressing macrophage-like plaque c
52 rlying most myocardial infarctions have thin fibrous caps and large necrotic cores; however, these fe
53 s of inflammation and more plaques had thick fibrous caps and no signs of inflammation, compared with
54 atients being treated with fish oil had thin fibrous caps and signs of inflammation and more plaques
55 c structural features of the atherosclerotic fibrous cap, and high-resolution microscopic and spectro
56 associated with larger lipid burden, thinner fibrous cap, and higher prevalence of thin-cap fibroathe
58 ement for this to occur is an extremely thin fibrous cap, and thus, ruptures occur mainly among lesio
60 ferocytosis, smaller necrotic cores, thicker fibrous caps, and increased ratio of proresolving versus
62 unica media, the base of the plaque, and the fibrous cap are increased in ruptured atherosclerotic pl
63 nd a thicker extracellular matrix (ECM)-rich fibrous cap are more stable, but there are major ambigui
65 intraplaque haemorrhage, or thin or ruptured fibrous caps, are increasingly believed to be associated
66 esion size but markedly reduces the relative fibrous cap area in plaques and increases VSMC apoptosis
69 However, VSMC DNA damage reduced relative fibrous cap areas, whereas accelerating DSB repair incre
70 advance a hypothesis for the rupture of thin fibrous cap atheroma, namely that minute (10-mum-diamete
71 lesions with pathologic intimal thickening, fibrous-cap atheromas with cores in an early or late sta
72 esions with pathologic intimal thickening or fibrous-cap atheromas with cores in an early stage of ne
73 resulted in development of plaques with thin fibrous caps because of decreased smooth muscle cell mig
74 bated with calcifying EVs were used to mimic fibrous cap calcification in vitro, while an ApoE(-/-) m
75 small microcalcifications within the plaque fibrous cap can lead to sufficient stress accumulation t
77 f smooth muscle cells (SMC) and other ACTA2+ fibrous cap cells destabilizes atherosclerotic plaques a
79 tudies that examine the relationship between fibrous cap changes and clinical outcome and to permit t
80 studies will determine the predictive value fibrous cap characteristics, as visualized by MRI, for r
85 gression and stabilize VPs by thickening the fibrous cap, decreasing atheroma and necrotic core volum
91 expression causes intraplaque hemorrhage and fibrous cap disruption, features associated with human p
94 esonance imaging (CEMRI) have shown that the fibrous cap (FC) in atherosclerotic carotid plaques enha
95 stics of the necrotic core (NC) covered by a fibrous cap (FC), intraplaque hemorrhage (IPH), and calc
96 tomography (IVOCT) enables identification of fibrous cap (FC), measurement of FC thicknesses, and ass
98 less mature, and have a reduced frequency of fibrous cap formation as compared with PDGF-B +/+ chimer
101 Contrast enhancement helped discriminate fibrous cap from lipid core with a contrast-to-noise rat
103 l is capable of distinguishing intact, thick fibrous caps from intact thin and disrupted caps in athe
104 o be capable of distinguishing intact, thick fibrous caps from thin and ruptured caps in human caroti
105 ongly support the hypothesis that nearly all fibrous caps have microCalcs, but only a small subset ha
106 core, increased inflammatory milieu and thin fibrous caps, have been well characterized through patho
108 e fibrous cap (RFC) and erosion of an intact fibrous cap (IFC) are the two predominant mechanisms cau
109 ables real-time detection of ACS with intact fibrous cap (IFC, plaque erosion) and ACS due to rupture
110 stic TREM2 antibody (4D9) markedly increased fibrous caps in both control and LAB mice, eliminating t
112 wed extensive macrophage infiltration of the fibrous cap, in particular at rupture sites contrary to
114 reased plaque stability, including a thinner fibrous cap, increased necrotic core area, and increased
115 formation while increasing the thickness of fibrous caps, indicating that it stabilized plaques.
116 o rupture were defined as those with a thin, fibrous cap infiltrated by macrophages and were quantita
118 igatory component of plaque vulnerability is fibrous cap inflammation; molecular imaging is best suit
120 mately 50% of mice, as well as disruption of fibrous caps, intraluminal thrombosis, neovascularizatio
123 ve a similar morphology, the overlying thick fibrous cap is intact, lined by endothelial cells, and d
125 45 weeks, smooth muscle cell accumulation in fibrous caps is indistinguishable in the two groups.
126 ed with a high-risk plaque, including a thin fibrous cap, large necrotic core, macrophage infiltratio
127 rupture, which characteristically have thin fibrous caps, large lipid pools, and abundant foam cells
128 hDTR Apoe-/- mice induced marked thinning of fibrous cap, loss of collagen and matrix, accumulation o
130 by histology as presence of lipid pool, thin fibrous cap (<65 microm by ocular micrometry), and infla
131 between OCT and histological measurements of fibrous cap macrophage density (r=0.84, P<0.0001) and a
133 that subcellular microcalcifications in the fibrous cap may promote material failure of the plaque,
134 terized by a necrotic core with an overlying fibrous cap measuring <65 microm, containing rare smooth
135 for 16 weeks developed advanced lesions with fibrous caps, necrotic cores, and cholesterol clefts in
136 perlecan in the necrotic core as well as the fibrous cap of advanced human atherosclerotic lesions in
138 Increased biomechanical stresses in the fibrous cap of atherosclerotic plaques contribute to pla
140 farction, and also in the degradation of the fibrous cap of atherosclerotic plaques, thereby contribu
141 of enzymes that may cause degradation of the fibrous cap of coronary plaque; shear stress; circadian
142 ression, including in cells that compose the fibrous cap of the lesion and in medial cells in proximi
144 hat microcalcifications that form within the fibrous cap of the plaques lead to the accrual of plaque
145 cifications (microCalcs) >/= 5 microm in the fibrous caps of 22 nonruptured human atherosclerotic pla
146 lar matrix is the principal component of the fibrous caps of atherosclerotic plaques and intimal hype
148 t reduction of MIA3 protein in VSMCs in thin fibrous caps of late-stage atherosclerotic plaques compa
149 in all plaques (r = 0.67, p < 0.001) and in fibrous caps of necrotic core fibroatheromas (r = 0.68,
151 thin the vessel wall could digest and weaken fibrous caps of vulnerable plaques, thus provoking throm
152 ue containing large necrotic cores with thin fibrous caps often precipitates these acute events.
153 hick, (2) an intact, thin, or (3) a ruptured fibrous cap on MRI, gross, and histological sections.
154 h such plaques are considered to have a thin fibrous cap overlying a lipid pool, imaging modalities i
155 from rupture of a vulnerable plaque (a thin fibrous cap overlying a lipid-rich core), and 18 resulti
156 n the Western world, usually occurs when the fibrous cap overlying an atherosclerotic plaque in a cor
161 s with severe macrophage infiltration at the fibrous cap (P=0.0001) and at the shoulders of the plaqu
164 In ruptured lesions, maximal stress within fibrous cap (peak cap stress [PCS]: 174 67 vs. 52 42 kPa
165 t macrophages were seen to accumulate in the fibrous cap, potentially promoting its focal erosion, as
166 We developed a fully automated method for fibrous cap quantification in IVOCT images, resulting in
168 lls, vascular smooth muscle cells within the fibrous cap region of the plaque, and macrophages within
170 c lesion, to the rupture of the "vulnerable" fibrous cap, resulting in the acute coronary syndrome an
172 IFC, plaque erosion) and ACS due to ruptured fibrous cap (RFC, plaque rupture), facilitating the deve
173 ymptomatic plaques had a higher incidence of fibrous cap rupture (P = .007), juxtaluminal hemorrhage
174 f coronary artery thrombosis with or without fibrous cap rupture in sudden coronary death is unknown.
177 tense lipid accumulation, inflammation, thin fibrous cap, severe internal elastic lamina degradation,
178 degrading proteases promotes thinning of the fibrous cap, severe internal elastic lamina fragmentatio
180 lating miR-210 in vitro and in vivo improved fibrous cap stability with implications for vascular dis
183 en, artery wall, and main plaque components; fibrous cap status (thick, thin, or ruptured); American
185 velocity (lipid-rich necrotic core content, fibrous cap structure, intraplaque hemorrhage), compleme
186 to have an associated threefold decrease in fibrous cap tensile stress compared to untreated control
187 enosis and has a large lipid core and a thin fibrous cap that is often infiltrated by inflammatory ce
189 osclerosis suggest that the thickness of the fibrous cap that overlies the necrotic core distinguishe
190 and cellular debris, typically covered by a fibrous cap that separates the thrombogenic core from th
191 onstrated an independent association between fibrous cap thickening and improved CEC that may contrib
192 e improved using lipid arc >/=80 degrees and fibrous cap thickness </=85 mum over 3 continuous frames
194 =0.30), the number of continuous frames with fibrous cap thickness </=85 mum was higher in TCFA (6.5
196 criteria: (1) lipid arc >=90(o), (2) minimum fibrous cap thickness <65 um, and (3) presence of either
197 rea <3.5 mm(2), Lipid arc >180 degrees , and fibrous cap thickness <75 um, similar to the CLIMA core
198 .4 kOmega vs. 7.2 +/- 1.0 kOmega, p = .019), fibrous cap thickness <=65 mum versus >65 mum (19.1 +/-
199 identified necrotic core area >=1.75 mm(2), fibrous cap thickness <=65 mum, and >=20 macrophages per
200 ation (15.4% versus 34.4%; P=0.008), whereas fibrous cap thickness (105.2+/-62.1 versus 96.1+/-40.4 m
204 on, lipid content reduction, and increase in fibrous cap thickness (ie, triple regression) are unknow
205 ments of plaque collagen (R=0.73, P<0.0001), fibrous cap thickness (R=0.87, P<0.0001), and necrotic c
206 optical coherence tomography-derived minimal fibrous cap thickness (smaller values indicating thin-ca
207 s in plaque morphology including increase in fibrous cap thickness and decrease in the prevalence of
209 mulation of macrophages along with increased fibrous cap thickness and smooth muscle cell numbers.
211 f plaque stability, including an increase in fibrous cap thickness as compared to wild-type controls.
212 rmore, our method showed a good agreement of fibrous cap thickness between two analysts with Bland-Al
213 volume by intravascular ultrasound, minimum fibrous cap thickness by optical coherence tomography, a
214 anges in percent atheroma volume and minimum fibrous cap thickness did not differ in relation to base
219 (1) a lipid arc at least 90 degrees , (2) a fibrous cap thickness less than 65 mum, and (3) either p
221 source laser are often used for identifying fibrous cap thickness of plaques, yet cannot provide ade
223 lesional macrophage content while increasing fibrous cap thickness thus conferring plaque stability.
228 terized by increased collagen deposition and fibrous cap thickness, along with a smaller necrotic cor
230 ding lumen area, lipid and calcium arcs, and fibrous cap thickness, and output segmented images and c
233 ified by morphometry and plaque stability by fibrous cap thickness, lipid accumulation, infiltration
234 acute carotid stroke, including wall volume, fibrous cap thickness, number and location of lipid clus
241 s features of plaque vulnerability including fibrous cap thinning and extensive necrotic core areas.
242 transcripts associated with inflammation and fibrous cap thinning and support further examination of
244 s to determine whether MRI identification of fibrous cap thinning or rupture is associated with a his
245 mooth muscle actin-positive cell population, fibrous cap thinning, and decreased collagen content.
246 ity, including elastic fiber degradation and fibrous cap thinning, by heightening metalloprotease pro
247 important mechanism for formation of a thick fibrous cap to protect the atherosclerotic plaque from r
248 tomatically detected the outer border of the fibrous cap using a special dynamic programming algorith
249 osclerotic lesion, RNA was prepared from the fibrous cap versus adjacent media of 13 patients undergo
251 median value of the minimum thickness of the fibrous cap was 47.0, 53.8, and 102.6 microm, respective
253 Using previously reported MRI criteria, the fibrous cap was categorized as intact-thick, intact-thin
256 cally, atherosclerotic plaque rupture of the fibrous cap was thought to be the main culprit in ACS.
257 sions, the overall incidence of apoptosis in fibrous caps was significantly greater in ruptured plaqu
258 acrophage content and the presence of buried fibrous caps, were significantly reduced by RAdTIMP-2.
259 within lesions and SMC investment within the fibrous cap, which may result from impaired SMC migratio
260 ollagen content and a marked thinning of the fibrous cap, which suggests that plaque progression was
261 of cholesterol or necrotic debris and a thin fibrous cap with a dense infiltration of macrophages.