Atlas of atherosclerosis : progression and regression
著者
書誌事項
Atlas of atherosclerosis : progression and regression
(The Encyclopedia of visual medicine series)
Parthenon Pub. Group, c2003
2nd ed
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Completely revised and updated, the Second Edition of the Atlas of Atherosclerosis Progression and Regression contains new material and new illustrations from Dr. Stary's groundbreaking work in the field of atherosclerosis diagnosis, prevention, and treatment. Over 100 photographs show arterial and lesion structure and individual components in unprecedented detail. These images allow you to compare and contrast healthy arteries with those developing and regressing lesions. They illustrate the successive steps in the natural history of human atherosclerotic disease from the microscopically visible, lipid-filled macrophages in susceptible locations of arteries to lesion forms that produce clinical symptoms.
The book provides an up-to-date, pathology-based framework of morphologies of atherosclerotic vascular lesions that serves as a basis for correlation with morphologies determined by a variety of clinical imaging techniques. Demonstrating the evolution of arterial lesions form the clinically silent to the clinically relevant, An Atlas of Atherosclerosis Progression and Regression is a teaching aid and diagnostic tool for recognizing changes in lesion progression, stabilization, or regression.
About the author: Dr. Stary is Professor of Pathology at the Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans. He came to New Orleans via the Departments of Pathology of the McGill (Montreal) and Yale (New Haven) Medical Schools. For 7 years, Dr. Stary also served as chairman of the American Heart Association's Committee on Vascular Lesions.
目次
A REVIEW OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS
Introduction and General Background
Flow Mechanical Forces, Adaptive Intimal Thickening and Arterial Sites Susceptible to Lipid Accumulation
Terminologies in Atherosclerosis and Classification of Lesions According to their Pathways of Development
Phase of Only Minimal Changes
The Histological Link between Minimal Changes and Clinically Important Disease
Phase of Clinically Important Lesions
Regression of Atherosclerotic Lesions in Human Subjects
Regression Experiments in Animals
Studies of Regressing and Residual Lesion Compositions in Rhesus Monkeys
References
ATHEROSCLEROSIS ILLUSTRATED
Index
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