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1.
Previous research in arterial remodeling in response to changes in blood pressure seldom included both hyper- and hypotension. To compare the effects of low and high pressure on arterial remodeling and vascular smooth muscle tone and performance, we have utilized an in vitro model. Porcine carotid arteries were cultured for 3 days at 30 and 170mmHg and compared to controls cultured at 100mmHg for 1 and 3 days. On the first and last day of culture, pressure-diameter and pressure-wall thickness curves were measured under normal smooth muscle tone using a high-resolution ultrasonic device. Last-day experiments included measurements where vascular smooth muscle was contracted or totally relaxed. From the data wall cross-sectional area, Hudetz elastic modulus and a contraction index related to the diameter reduction under normal smooth muscle tone were calculated. We found that although wall cross-sectional area (indicating wall mass) did not change much, Hudetz elastic modulus was significantly reduced in the 3-day hypotension group. Inspection of the wall contraction index suggests that this is due to a reduction in the vascular smooth muscle tone. Further, the peak of contraction index was found to be shifted to higher pressures in the 3-day 170mmHg group. We conclude that vascular smooth muscle performance adapts to both hypo- and hypertension at short time scales and can alter the biomechanics of the vascular wall in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
Arteries can adapt to sustained changes in blood pressure and flow, and it is thought that these adaptive processes often begin with an altered smooth muscle cell activity that precedes any detectable changes in the passive wall components. Yet, due to the intrinsic coupling between the active and passive properties of the arterial wall, it has been difficult to delineate the adaptive contributions of active smooth muscle. To address this need, we used a novel experimental–computational approach to quantify adaptive functions of active smooth muscle in arterial rings excised from the proximal descending thoracic aorta of mice and subjected to short-term sustained circumferential stretches while stimulated with various agonists. A new mathematical model of the adaptive processes was derived and fit to data to describe and predict the effects of active tone adaptation. It was found that active tone was maintained when the artery was adapted close to the optimal stretch for maximal active force production, but it was reduced when adapted below the optimal stretch; there was no significant change in passive behavior in either case. Such active adaptations occurred only upon smooth muscle stimulation with phenylephrine, however, not stimulation with KCl or angiotensin II. Numerical simulations using the proposed model suggested further that active tone adaptation in vascular smooth muscle could play a stabilizing role for wall stress in large elastic arteries.  相似文献   

3.
We have developed a computational simulation model for investigating an often postulated hypothesis connected with aneurysm growth. This hypothesis involves a combination of two parallel and interconnected mechanisms: according to the first mechanism, an endothelium-originating and wall shear stress-driven apoptotic behavior of smooth muscle cells, leading to loss of vascular tone is believed to be important to the aneurysm behavior. Vascular tone refers to the degree of constriction experienced by a blood vessel relative to its maximally dilated state. All resistance and capacitance vessels under basal conditions exhibit some degree of smooth muscle contraction that determines the diameter, and hence tone, of the vessel. The second mechanism is connected to the arterial wall remodeling. Remodeling of the arterial wall under constant tension is a biomechanical process of rupture, degradation and reconstruction of the medial elastin and collagen fibers. In order to investigate these two mechanisms within a computationally tractable framework, we devise mechanical analogues that involve three-dimensional haemodynamics, yielding estimates of the wall shear stress and pressure fields and a quasi-steady approach for the apoptosis and remodeling of the wall. These analogues are guided by experimental information for the connection of stimuli to responses at a cellular level, properly averaged over volumes or surfaces. The model predicts aneurysm growth and can attribute specific roles to the two mechanisms involved: the smooth muscle cell-related loss of tone is important to the initiation of aneurysm growth, but cannot account alone for the formation of fully grown sacks; the fiber-related remodeling is pivotal for the latter.  相似文献   

4.
In 19 anaesthetised cats, the response of vascular bed to increasing perfusion pressure at a constant blood flow perfusion consisted of two phases: a myogenic constriction and a subsequent arterial dilatation. The latter depended on ability of the endothelium to relax the smooth muscle under stress. The findings suggest that the control of the smooth muscle tone by a stress has to fight against the myogenic constriction and thus determines the changes in vascular resistance induced by an increased arterial pressure.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Although the level of myogenic tone (MT) varies considerably from vessel to vessel, the regulatory mechanisms through which the actual diameter set point is determined are not known. We hypothesized that a unifying principle may be the equalization of active force at the contractile filament level, which would be reflected in a normalization of wall stress or, more specifically, media stress. Branched segments of rat cerebral arteries ranging from <50 microm to >200 microm in diameter were cannulated and held at 60 mmHg with the objectives of: 1) evaluating the relationship between arterial diameter and the extent of myogenic tone, 2) determining whether differences in MT correlate with changes in cytosolic calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)), and 3) testing the hypothesis that a normalization of wall or media stress occurs during the process of tone development. The level of MT increased significantly as vessel size decreased. At 60 mmHg, vascular smooth muscle [Ca(2+)](i) concentrations were similar in all vessels studied (averaging 230 +/- 9.2 nM) and not correlated with vessel size or the extent of tone. Wall tension increased with increasing arterial size, but wall stress and media stress were similar in large versus small arteries. Media stress, in particular, was quite uniform in all vessels studied. Both morphological and calcium data support the concept of equalization of media stress (and, hence, vascular smooth muscle cell stress and force) as an underlying mechanism in determining the level of tone present in any particular vessel. The equalization of active (vascular smooth muscle cell) stress may thus explain differences in MT observed in the different-sized vessels constituting the arterial network and provide a link between arterial structure and function, in both short- and long-term (hypertension) pressure adaptation.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The peptide Angiotensin II (Ang II), part of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), participates in the control of systemic arterial pressure. Ang II participates in increasing smooth muscle tone, and its positive effects on smooth muscle cell DNA synthesis are inhibited by treatment with prazosin, an alpha(1)-adrenoceptor agonist. Ang II also induces the expression of alpha(1)-adrenoceptor, especially the alpha(1D) subtype. Other findings suggest that the molecular signals activated by Ang II and by alpha(1D)-adrenoceptor might interweave, thus leading to the augmentation of smooth muscle tone and hypertension.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of control of arterial diameter by the shear stress at the endothelium on noradrenaline-induced constriction of femoral vascular bed was investigated in anaesthetised cats. We compared noradrenaline-induced responses during the perfusion of the hindlimb at a constant blood flow and at a constant pressure as vasoconstriction is accompanied by an increase in wall shear stress only in the former case. We found that the same concentration of noradrenaline at a constant flow caused an augmentation of vascular resistance that was considerably smaller than at a constant pressure perfusion. This difference was almost eliminated after either removal of the endothelium or selective impairment of the endothelial sensitivity to the shear stress. These findings demonstrate that the control of arterial smooth muscle tone at a constant blood flow by shear stress at the endothelium does weaken noradrenaline-induced vasoconstriction.  相似文献   

10.
Our objective in this study was to evaluate the relative amount of smooth muscle cells in the medial layer of various rabbit arteries. The fixation of smooth muscle cells in the arterial wall is difficult and the differential effect of glutaraldehyde (GA) and fixative vehicle on cell ultrastructure in different tissues is controversial. We compared the effect of various concentrations of the vehicle and glutaraldehyde (osmolarity ranges for total fixative, 350-1030 mOsm) on the arterial wall ultrastructure. We found that a 600 mOsm GA solution (isotonic vehicle; 2.5% GA) adequately preserves arterial wall structures. The relative amount of smooth muscle cells in the media differed in various segments along the arterial tree. It ranged from 35% (thoracic aorta) to 74% (tibial artery). The importance of weighting the contractile response of different arteries in vitro to their relative smooth muscle cell content is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Recent experimental studies have shown significant alterations of the vascular smooth muscle (VSM) tone when an artery is subjected to an elevation in pressure. Therefore, the VSM participates in the adaptation process not only by means of its synthetic activity (fibronectins and collagen) or proliferative activity (hypertrophy and hyperplasia) but also by adjusting its contractile properties and its tone level. In previous theoretical models describing the time evolution of the arterial wall adaptation in response to induced hypertension, the contribution of VSM tone has been neglected. In this study, we propose a new biomechanical model for the wall adaptation to induced hypertension, including changes in VSM tone. On the basis of Hill's model, total circumferential stress is separated into its passive and active components, the active part being the stress developed by the VSM. Adaptation rate equations describe the geometrical adaptation (wall thickening) and the adaptation of active stress (VSM tone). The evolution curves that are derived from the theoretical model fit well the experimental data describing the adaptation of the rat common carotid subjected to a step increase in pressure. This leads to the identification of the model parameters and time constants by characterizing the rapidity of the adaptation processes. The agreement between the results of this simple theoretical model and the experimental data suggests that the theoretical approach used here may appropriately account for the biomechanics underlying the arterial wall adaptation.  相似文献   

12.
Vasodilator actions of several N-nitroso compounds   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Recent studies have shown that N-nitroso compounds can activate arterial guanylate cyclase and relax isolated arterial smooth muscle; however, the effects of these substances on the cardiovascular system in the anesthetized cat are unknown. The present study was undertaken to compare the effects of several nitrosoguanidines and a nitrosamine, N-nitrosodimethylamine, on arterial guanylate cyclase activity, isolated arterial smooth muscle tone, and systemic vascular resistance in the anesthetized cat. Intravenous injections and infusions of the nitrosoguanidines glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) decreased systemic arterial pressure. During intravenous infusion of the nitrosoguanidines GTN and SNP, cardiac output was unchanged at the peak of the decrease in aortic pressure, indicating that the nitrosoguanidines GTN and SNP both reduced systemic vascular resistance. In addition, intraarterial injections of the nitrosoguanidines produced dose-dependent decreases in perfusion pressure in the feline mesenteric vascular bed perfused at constant flow. These substances were potent relaxants of isolated arterial smooth muscle and markedly activated arterial guanylate cyclase. In contrast, N-nitrosodimethylamine was devoid of vasodilator activity in vivo and exerted only minimal effects on isolated arterial smooth muscle tone or on arterial guanylate cyclase activity. The present data demonstrate a relationship between guanylate cyclase activation and arterial smooth muscle relaxation and suggest that the vasodilator effects on resistance vessels in vivo in response to selected N-nitroso compounds may involve such a mechanism. Although the significance of the presently reported cardiovascular responses to N-nitroso compounds is uncertain, N-nitroso compounds may represent a previously unrecognized class of substances which can be formed in the body and which possess marked vasodilator activity. It is possible that this vasodilator activity may involve the relaxation of vascular smooth muscle through activation of guanylate cyclase.  相似文献   

13.
Arterial smooth muscle constriction in response to pressure, i.e., myogenic tone, may involve calcium-dependent and calcium-sensitization mechanisms. Calcium sensitization in vascular smooth muscle is regulated by kinases such as PKC and Rho kinase, and activity of these kinases is known to be altered in cardiovascular disorders. In the present study, we evaluated the relative contribution of PKC and Rho kinase to myogenic tone in cerebral arteries in hypertension. Myogenic tone and arterial wall calcium in Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) were measured simultaneously, and the effect of PKC and Rho kinase inhibitors on myogenic tone was evaluated. SHR arteries showed significantly greater myogenic tone than WKY arteries. Pressure/wall tension-arterial wall calcium curves showed a hyperbolic relation in WKY rats, but the curves for SHR arteries were parabolic. Myogenic tone was decreased by the Rho kinase inhibitors Y-27632 and HA-1077, with a significantly greater effect in SHR than in WKY arteries. Reduction in myogenic tone produced by the PKC inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide I in WKY and SHR arteries was significantly less than that produced by Rho kinase inhibition. The pressure-dependent increase in myogenic tone was significantly decreased by Y-27632, and the decrease was markedly greater than that produced by bisindolylmaleimide I in SHR arteries. In WKY arteries, the pressure-dependent increase in myogenic tone was decreased to a similar extent by Y-27632 and bisindolylmaleimide I. These results suggest greater myogenic tone with increased calcium sensitization in SHR arteries, largely because of Rho kinase activation, with a minor contribution of PKC activation.  相似文献   

14.
Activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays an important role in cardiovascular protection. It can inhibit arterial smooth muscle cell proliferation and cardiac fibroblast collagen synthesis induced by anoxia. However, the role of AMPK-dependent signalling cascades in the pulmonary vascular system is currently unknown. This study aims to determine the effects of AMPK on pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary vessel remodelling induced by hypoxia in rats using in vivo and in vitro studies. In vivo study: pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular hypertrophy and pulmonary vascular remodelling were found in hypoxic rats. Meanwhile, AMPKα1 and phosphorylated AMPKα1 were increased markedly in pulmonary arterioles and lung tissues. Mean pulmonary arterial pressure, index of right ventricular hypertrophy and parameters of pulmonary vascular remodelling, including vessel wall area/total area, density of nuclei in medial smooth muscle cells, and thickness of the medial smooth muscle cell layer were markedly suppressed by AICAR, an AMPK agonist. In vitro study: the expression of AMPKα1 and phosphorylated AMPKα1 was increased in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) under hypoxic conditions. The effects of PASMC proliferation stimulated by hypoxia were reinforced by treatment with Compound C, an AMPK inhibitor. AICAR inhibited the proliferation of PASMCs stimulated by hypoxia. These findings suggest that AMPK is involved in the formation of hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary vessel remodelling. Up-regulating AMPK can contribute to decreasing pulmonary vessel remodelling and pulmonary hypertension induced by hypoxia.  相似文献   

15.
Previous work from this laboratory has demonstrated that the chemical activation of cell bodies in the caudal ventrolateral medulla of chloralose-anesthetized dogs decreased bronchomotor tone by withdrawing cholinergic input to airway smooth muscle. In the present study we determined the bronchomotor responses to microinjection of DL-homocysteic acid (100 mM; 25-50 nl) into the rostral ventrolateral (RVL) medulla of chloralose-anesthetized dogs. Total lung resistance was used as a functional index of bronchomotor tone. Microinjection of DL-homocysteic acid into the 20 sites located in the lateral aspect of the RVL medulla increased both total lung resistance [from 6.5 +/- 0.4 to 9.1 +/- 0.8 (SE) cmH2O.l-1.s; P less than 0.05] and mean arterial pressure (from 125 +/- 5 to 148 +/- 8 mmHg; P less than 0.05). Microinjection of this amino acid into nine sites located in the medial aspect of the RVL medulla increased mean arterial pressure (from 130 +/- 6 to 153 +/- 6 mmHg; P less than 0.05) but had no effect on total lung resistance. We confirmed in three sites that the increase in total lung resistance evoked by microinjection of DL-homocysteic acid was accompanied by an increase in tracheal smooth muscle tension. The increase in total lung resistance evoked by DL-homocysteic acid was not affected by beta-adrenergic blockade but was abolished by muscarinic blockade.  相似文献   

16.
We present a model of esophageal wall muscle mechanics during bolus transport with which the active and "passive" components of circular muscle tension are separately extracted from concurrent manometric and videofluoroscopic data. Local differential equations of motion are integrated across the esophageal wall to yield global equations of equilibrium which relate total tension within the esophageal wall to intraluminal pressure and wall geometry. To quantify the "passive" (i.e. inactive) length-tension relationships, the model equations are applied to a region of the esophagus in which active muscle contraction is physiologically inhibited. Combining the global equations with space-time-resolved intraluminal pressure measured manometrically and videofluoroscopic geometry data, the passive model is used to separate active and "passive" components of esophageal muscle tension during bolus transport. The model is of general applicability to probe basic muscle mechanics including the space-time stimulation of circular muscle, the relationship between longitudinal muscle tension and longitudinal muscle shortening, and the contribution of the collagen matrix surrounding muscle fibers to passive tension during normal human esophageal bolus transport and in pathology. Example calculations of normal esophageal function are given where active tone is found to extend only over a short intrabolus segment near the bolus tail and segmental regions of active muscle squeeze are demonstrated.  相似文献   

17.
This paper reviews some of the experimental data regarding the effects of hypertension and antihypertensive drugs on the arterial wall. Hypertension induces major changes in both the arterial media and intima. Experimental studies from our own and other laboratories have demonstrated that medial smooth muscle cells in several forms of hypertension in the rat undergo hypertrophy and nuclear polyploidy which contribute, along with connective tissue alterations, to a large increase in medial mass. Our studies in the deoxycorticosterone/salt-hypertensive rat indicate that such changes may be difficult to regress, despite prolonged control of the hypertension. In the arterial intima, major alterations in the endothelium are induced by hypertension in association with increase in arterial permeability. Marked enhancements of adherence of circulating white blood cells to the endothelium can also be demonstrated along with penetration of blood monocytes and their accumulation in the subendothelial space. Hypertension also appears to stimulate the migration and proliferation of smooth muscle cells in the intima, and evidence is beginning to accumulate that endogenous growth factors within the artery may be involved in this process. Essentially all of the intimal changes which we have observed as a result of arterial hypertension are also present with cholesterol feeding although intimal accumulation of lipid and formation of atherosclerotic plaques do not occur with hypertension alone. On the other hand, in hypercholesterolemic animals, hypertension appears to act as a promoter of atherogenesis. Several antihypertensive drugs may influence the atherosclerotic process. The experimental data regarding the effects of beta blockers and calcium antagonists in the cholesterol-fed rabbit are discussed. Though of considerable interest, the clinical relevance of the findings remains uncertain.  相似文献   

18.
An optimization principle is proposed for the regulation of vascular morphology. This principle, which extends Murray's law, is based on the hypothesis that blood vessel diameter is controlled by a mechanism that minimizes the total energy required to drive the blood flow, to maintain the blood supply, and to support smooth muscle tone. A theoretical analysis reveals that the proposed principle predicts that the optimum shear stress on the vessel wall due to blood flow increases with blood pressure. This result agrees qualitatively with published findings that the fluid shear stress in veins is significantly smaller than it is in arteries.  相似文献   

19.
Acute and long-term (up to 56 days) evolution of geometry, structural properties, vascular smooth muscle (VSM) tone and histomorphometric properties of the rat common carotid arteries under induced hypertension were investigated. Hypertension was induced in 8-week old male Wistar rats by total ligation of the aorta between the two kidneys. Rats were sacrificed 2, 4, 8 and 56 days postsurgery. The arterial wall layers thicken non-uniformly during the adaptation process, the inner layers thicken more in the acute phase of hypertension, whereas the outer layers of the wall are thicker than the inner layers at the end of the adaptation phase. Collagen content in the wall media exhibits a non-linear evolution, with a rapid increase in the acute hypertension phase followed by a slower increase at long-term. The elastin content increase is slight and steady, whereas VSM shows a steady but considerable increase which outdoes the collagen increase in long-term phase. VSM tone increases rapidly in the acute phase of remodelling (0-8 days) and this increase in tone contributes to a considerable increase in arterial compliance in the operating pressure range. At long-term (56 days) VSM tone returns to near control level, but compliance is even further increased, which suggests that at long-term the compliance increase is attributed primarily to structural remodelling.  相似文献   

20.
Large mesenteric arteries from 3- to 4-wk-old spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) showed medial hypertrophy and an increased contractile response to various agonists before significant blood pressure increase. Here we determined the cellular nature of this vascular hypertrophy. Large mesenteric arteries from SHR and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats were fixed at maximal relaxation either with an in situ perfusion fixation or an in vitro fixation method. With the use of morphometric protocols and confocal microscopy, the volume of the medial wall and lumen, numerical density of smooth muscle cell nuclei in the medial layer, and smooth muscle cell and nuclear length were measured. Both methods of fixation yielded similar results, showing significant medial volume expansion in SHR than WKY without lumen change. Numerical density of medial smooth muscle cells was significantly less in SHR than WKY, and their total number per 100 microm length were similar between the strains. Average smooth muscle nuclear and cell length from SHR was significantly longer than that of WKY. Regression analysis showed that the increase in smooth muscle cell length explained 80% of the medial volume increase. We concluded that increased smooth muscle cell length in prehypertensive SHR is responsible for increased medial volume in the mesenteric arteries.  相似文献   

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