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  • Title: Presence of Chlamydia pneumoniae in human symptomatic and asymptomatic carotid atherosclerotic plaque.
    Author: LaBiche R, Koziol D, Quinn TC, Gaydos C, Azhar S, Ketron G, Sood S, DeGraba TJ.
    Journal: Stroke; 2001 Apr; 32(4):855-60. PubMed ID: 11283382.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Chlamydia pneumoniae has been identified in atherosclerotic plaques of patients with cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease. However, the direct causative effect of C pneumoniae infection in the activation of atherosclerotic plaque to a prothrombotic state remains to be established. The aim of the present study is to examine the correlation between intraplaque presence of chlamydiae and symptomatic carotid disease in humans. METHODS: Plaques from 37 symptomatic and 57 asymptomatic consenting patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy were snap-frozen, and the tissue was prepared for polymerase chain reaction analysis for Chlamydia pneumoniae per Institutional Review Board-approved protocol. Blood was drawn from each patient at the time of surgery for serological analysis. RESULTS: The overall rate of plaques positive for C pneumoniae was 14.82%, with 5 of 37 (13.5%) plaques from symptomatic patients and 9 of 57 (15.8%) from asymptomatic patients, which revealed a definitive presence of the organism. No association existed between C pneumoniae presence and symptomatic disease (P:=1.0). Also, no association existed between presence of C pneumoniae and severity of stenosis. Finally, seropositivity for anti-chlamydial IgG, IgA, and IgM anti-chlamydial antibodies did not correlate with identification of C pneumoniae in the plaques. However, high-serum anti-chlamydial IgA levels (>/=1:128) were associated with occurrence of symptomatic disease (P=0.03; odds ratio, 2.86; 95% CI, 1.12 to 7.28). CONCLUSIONS: Presence of C pneumoniae as a single factor does not appear to be sufficient to explain the occurrence of cerebrovascular symptoms. Low sensitivity of seropositivity for IgG, IgA, or IgM associated with PCR-identified C pneumoniae presence in the plaque makes it unlikely to be valuable as the single determining factor for actively infected plaque. Association of high-level anti-chlamydial IgA with symptomatic disease suggests that chronic or acute chlamydial infection anywhere in the body could play a role in atherosclerotic plaque activation and be used as a marker to target populations in future stroke prevention trials.
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