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Jeffrey B. Hodgin, John H. Krege, Robert L. Reddick, Kenneth S. Korach, Oliver Smithies, Nobuyo Maeda
Published in Volume 107, Issue 3
J Clin Invest. 2001; 107(3):333–340 doi:10.1172/JCI11320
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Figure 2

H&E (af) and Sudan IV (g) staining of representative lesions from individual mice, 10× (ae) and 20× (f and g) magnification. Numbers in lumen (top) indicate the lesion size for each example. Lesions from E2-deficient AAee/C (a) and ααee/C (b) females have multiple features of complex lesions including fibrous caps (black arrowheads), acellular cores (AC) with cholesterol clefts (short yellow arrows), and medial extension into the adventitia (long yellow arrow). Note that the lesion in the AAee/E2 female (c) is essentially a fatty streak composed of lipid-laden macrophages (foam cells). A lesion from an ααee/E2 female (d) has a fibrous cap (black arrowheads) in addition to many foam cells. A second example of a lesion from an ααee/E2 female (e) is composed primarily of foam cells. In (f), a focal collection of inflammatory cells (IC) is present adjacent to a small lesion that contains foam cells and a thin fibrous cap (black arrowhead) in an ααee/C female. Sudan IV staining of the base of a lesion found in an ααee/C female (g) illustrate examples of fragmentation of the media, calcifications (yellow arrowhead), and extension of the lesion into the adventitia (yellow arrow). Lipid-laden foam-cell macrophages are stained red.