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Atherosclerosis is not only a tongue twister;
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it’s the leading cause of heart attacks worldwide.
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Understanding how this disease can lead to an attack starts with knowing how your immune
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system works for and against you.
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The good news is that thanks to medical advancements, people are living longer and surviving in
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the face of this disease.
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- So there's really good news on the horizon for atherosclerosis.
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We are increasingly understanding the disease.
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My name is DeLisa Fairweather.
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I'm a PhD researcher in Jacksonville, Florida, working at Mayo Clinic.
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I've been studying heart disease for around 25 years.
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Atherosclerosis is a very long name that's difficult to pronounce.
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So it really refers to “athero-,” which talks about the vessels in our heart, and
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“sclerosis,” which means fibrosis of those vessels.
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And it is one of the most common heart diseases around the world.
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And what happens is inflammation goes into the vessel wall and accumulates there, and
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we call that a plaque.
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Plaque and atherosclerosis is caused by inflammation, and the inflammation is really trying to regulate
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a problem.
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And the problem is that we have too much cholesterol.
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Cholesterol is a type of fat made by our liver, and that we get in part from our food.
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There are two main types of cholesterol: “good cholesterol,” HDL,
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and “bad cholesterol,” LDL.
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The good cholesterol helps keep the bad cholesterol in check, but, if there’s an imbalance,
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the bad cholesterol can build up on the walls of your arteries, increasing your risk of
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a heart attack.
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One way to think of the arteries around your heart is like pipes.
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And when those pipes get filled with bad cholesterol, it can create a kind of clog.
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The body’s immune cells then come along and try to clear up the fat, absorbing it
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into themselves.
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- The immune system is really important in this process because it is going in and is
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trying to repair the damage.
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On the one hand, it's trying to repair the damage; on the other hand it contributes to
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the damage.
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And you can kind of think of it as if you had a bomb, and you wanted to try to protect
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it, but you couldn't remove the bomb, what would you do?
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Well, you would want to try to create a protective covering so that it could not cause damage.
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And that's what the immune cell, the macrophage, tries to do and it takes the fat inside its
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body.
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It accumulates all of that fat.
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So it ends up looking like what we call a “foam cell,” all full of the fat molecules.
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This foaming process creates a backlog of these fatty immune cells which clog the vessel
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wall, with more and more cells clogging that pipe and creating a problem with blood flow.
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This often presents as high blood pressure, which means the blood is trying to get through
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this small area of the vessel.
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This can lead to a rupture.
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- And when the rupture happens, then everything is released.
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It ends up in a clot, and you can have a heart attack, or that clot can break free and become
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loose and travel through your vessels, and cause a stroke if it goes to your brain.
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All of this so far is “atherosclerosis,” but this form of heart disease is most commonly
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linked to heart attacks.
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So what is a heart attack exactly?
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- So what is happening when you have a heart attack is that the conditions have all come
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to this perfect storm
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and what happens with a heart attack is the vessel wall has inflammation that ends up
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in what we call a plaque.
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And that plaque buildup then can burst open and clog the artery and
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that then causes a heart attack.
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It completely stops up the vessel.
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And when that happens, the blood flow's cut off to that area of your heart and when the blood
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flow's cut off, then the cells in that area will start to die.
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So the technical term is a myocardial infarct.
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We most commonly call it a heart attack.
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Symptoms of a heart attack include pain down the left side of your arm, shortness of breath,
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and nausea - and these are all associated with that cutoff of blood flow to the heart.
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Then what's happening inside the heart is that when that blood flow's cut off, it is
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needed to provide energy and life to those cells in your heart and those cells start
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to die very rapidly and cause heart damage.
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Risk factors for atherosclerosis and heart attacks include things that you can control
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like smoking, diet, and high cholesterol - and some you can’t control, like age.
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- An important risk factor is if you're male, especially younger, middle-aged male, you
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have a higher risk factor; as you age, for women, the risk factor of having atherosclerosis
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comes after menopause and actually when you're much older, maybe around age 70, and that's
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because estrogen really protects you from having a heart attack when you're younger.
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Fortunately, there have been exciting new developments in the area of understanding
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this disease and preventing it.
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- Really the statistics are wonderful that we are preventing people from dying.
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So even though you might have the clot, we're able to go in and remove the clot very rapidly
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when someone has a heart attack and put in what's called a stent.
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And this just holds this area open.
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And that technology is improving every year, so that people can live after having these
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heart attacks, a really great life and a full life.
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And we're making great inroads, so that this disease is not killing nearly as many people
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as it used to.