O'Brien J P
Pathol Biol (Paris). 1984 Feb;32(2):123-38.
Destruction (elastolysis) of the internal elastic lamina is frequently observed near early atherosclerotic plaques. Elastolysis and plaque formation are also found together in the temporal arteritis/polymyalgia rheumatica syndrome. Could it be that atherosclerosis and the syndrome are more closely akin than usually thought, with elastolysis acting as the pathogenetic link between them? A kinship of this nature is in accord with the growing recognition that elastin-related autoimmunity prevails in both these forms of vascular disease. A case can also be made out for the belief that the autoimmune reactions in internal vessels may be provoked by events in the integument where a slow but ultimately massive turnover of dermal and vascular elastic tissue takes place under the harmful influence of solar and other forms of actinic radiation.