Relationship of Chlamydia pneumoniae infection to severity of human coronary atherosclerosis

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Abstract

Background - Infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae has been postulated to play a pathogenic role in atherosclerosis. We examined the role of infection with C pneumoniae in relation to the extent of coronary atherosclerosis. Methods and Results - Coronary atherosclerosis was graded microscopically on a postmortem basis in a blinded fashion in 60 subjects as mild (n = 18) or severe (n = 42) atherosclerosis. Serum antibodies to C pneumoniae were measured by microimmunofluorescence test. Paraffin-embedded coronary artery specimens were examined for the presence of chlamydia by use of a genus- specific direct immunofluorescence monoclonal antibody. Frozen coronary artery specimens were examined by immunoperoxidase for the presence of C pneumoniae by use of a specific monoclonal antibody RR-402. Direct immunofluorescence was reactive in 86% of cases with severe atherosclerosis but in only 6% of cases with mild atherosclerosis (P < 0.01), whereas immunoperoxidase staining was reactive in 80% and 38% of cases with severe and mild atherosclerosis, respectively (P < 0.01). Elevated IgG and IgA levels against C pneumoniae were not different in cases with severe and mild atherosclerosis (61% and 30% for severe atherosclerosis and 67% and 42% for mild atherosclerosis, respectively). Conclusions - This study supports the hypothesis that intracellular infection with C pneumoniae may relate to the severity of atherosclerosis in some subjects. Serum antibody titers against C pneumoniae do not differentiate between severe and mild atherosclerosis.

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Ericson, K., Saldeen, T. G. P., Lindquist, O., Påhlson, C., & Mehta, J. L. (2000). Relationship of Chlamydia pneumoniae infection to severity of human coronary atherosclerosis. Circulation, 101(22), 2568–2571. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.101.22.2568

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