65 research outputs found
Wall shear stress as measured in vivo: consequences for the design of the arterial system
Based upon theory, wall shear stress (WSS), an important determinant of endothelial function and gene expression, has been assumed to be constant along the arterial tree and the same in a particular artery across species. In vivo measurements of WSS, however, have shown that these assumptions are far from valid. In this survey we will discuss the assessment of WSS in the arterial system in vivo and present the results obtained in large arteries and arterioles. In vivo WSS can be estimated from wall shear rate, as derived from non-invasively recorded velocity profiles, and whole blood viscosity in large arteries and plasma viscosity in arterioles, avoiding theoretical assumptions. In large arteries velocity profiles can be recorded by means of a specially designed ultrasound system and in arterioles via optical techniques using fluorescent flow velocity tracers. It is shown that in humans mean WSS is substantially higher in the carotid artery (1.1–1.3 Pa) than in the brachial (0.4–0.5 Pa) and femoral (0.3–0.5 Pa) arteries. Also in animals mean WSS varies substantially along the arterial tree. Mean WSS in arterioles varies between about 1.0 and 5.0 Pa in the various studies and is dependent on the site of measurement in these vessels. Across species mean WSS in a particular artery decreases linearly with body mass, e.g., in the infra-renal aorta from 8.8 Pa in mice to 0.5 Pa in humans. The observation that mean WSS is far from constant along the arterial tree implies that Murray’s cube law on flow-diameter relations cannot be applied to the whole arterial system. Because blood flow velocity is not constant along the arterial tree either, a square law also does not hold. The exponent in the power law likely varies along the arterial system, probably from 2 in large arteries near the heart to 3 in arterioles. The in vivo findings also imply that in in vitro studies no average shear stress value can be taken to study effects on endothelial cells derived from different vascular areas or from the same artery in different species. The cells have to be studied under the shear stress conditions they are exposed to in real life
Dimensions of compartments and membrane surfaces in the intact rabbit heart of importance in studies on intramyocardial transfer of blood-borne substances
Cardiac studies on the uptake, storage and
intramyocardial transfer of blood-borne substances
require detailed information on the geometric
ultrastructural dimensions of myocardial compartments
and parts thereof, and the membranes separating these
compartments. Such a specific ultrastructural set of data
of the heart is yet lacking. In the present study, we
quantitatively assessed these dimensions in
glutaraldehyde-perfusion fixed rabbit hearts by means of
histological and tailored mathematical techniques.
We showed the true ellipsoid nature of the
myocardial capillary cross section and estimated the
mean capillary diameter dcap. After correction for the
ellipsoid shape, dcap was found to be 5.21±1.41 μm.
Effective widths of the endothelial cell and the
pericapillary interstitium (is1), dimensions of importance
in diffusion, amounted to 187±7 and 160±10 nm,
respectively. The fractional volume of the large vessels
(arteries and veins larger than 10 µm), capillaries,
endothelium, is1, cardiomyocytes, non-pericapillary
interstitium is2, t-tubular compartment and interstitial
cells amounted on average to 5.92%, 9.36%, 1.83%,
1.94%, 73.07%, 5.97%, 0.95% and 0.96%, respectively,
of total myocardial volume, defined as the cardiac tissue
volume, the large blood vessels included. Normalized to
total myocardial volume, the surface area of the luminal
and abluminal endothelial membranes and of the
cardiomyocyte membrane opposing the endothelial cells
amounted to 75.2±5.5x103, 82.2±6.0x103 and
89.1±6.5x103 m2/m3, respectively.
The present study provides quantitative information
about ultrastructural dimensions of the adult rabbit heart,
among others, of importance for studies on cardiac
uptake, and intramyocardial transfer and storage of
blood-supplied substances
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