(Stroke. 2000;31:2930.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Departments of Vascular Surgery and Radiology (A.W.M.M.), Imperial College School of Medicine, Charing Cross Campus, London, UK.
Background and PurposeResearch for infectious agents in the etiology of atherosclerosis has identified Chlamydia pneumoniae as a possible candidate. While there is evidence of an association between presence of this microorganism and atherosclerosis, it is unclear whether infection has a genuinely etiologic role in this disease, whether its presence influences clinical outcomes, and, if so, at which stages of disease this occurs. We have approached this issue in patients with advanced carotid artery atherosclerosis using molecular biological detection methods and clinically relevant indicators of pathology in carotid artery atheroma to determine whether the presence of C pneumoniae correlates with plaque instability.
MethodsC pneumoniae was detected with the use of a sensitive nested polymerase chain reaction. Preoperative embolization and preoperative infarcts were recorded with the use of transcranial Doppler insonation of the middle cerebral artery and cerebral CT, respectively.
ResultsC pneumoniae DNA was detected in 25.5% of a cohort of 98 symptomatic patients. There was no significant difference in plaque stability as measured by embolization rates between the chlamydial-positive and -negative specimens. There was also no correlation between the number of ipsilateral hemispheric infarcts in the territory of the middle cerebral artery and chlamydial status.
ConclusionsThis study confirms that C pneumoniae is a common finding in atherosclerotic plaques of the carotid artery but suggests that the presence of the infectious organism has little detectable impact on plaque instability when measured by clinically significant markers. This raises important questions for the rationale of antibiotic therapy in atherosclerosis.
Key Words: atherosclerosis carotid arteries embolism infection
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