Inward remodeling follows chronic vasoconstriction in isolated resistance arteries

ENTP Bakker, ET Van der Meulen… - Journal of vascular …, 2002 - karger.com
ENTP Bakker, ET Van der Meulen, BM Van den Berg, V Everts, JAE Spaan, E VanBavel
Journal of vascular research, 2002karger.com
The hypothesis was tested that chronic vasoconstriction is followed by a structural reduction
in lumen diameter, measured at full dilation. An in vitro model of pressurized rat skeletal
muscle arterioles was used. During a 3-day experimental period, constriction of active
vessels was achieved with fetal calf serum or endothelin-1 (ET-1). Maximal dilation revealed
inward remodeling from 179±6.5 µm lumen diameter on day 0 to 151±6.3 µm on day 3 at 75
mm Hg in vessels incubated with serum (n= 8). Similarly, ET-1 induced inward remodeling …
Abstract
The hypothesis was tested that chronic vasoconstriction is followed by a structural reduction in lumen diameter, measured at full dilation. An in vitro model of pressurized rat skeletal muscle arterioles was used. During a 3-day experimental period, constriction of active vessels was achieved with fetal calf serum or endothelin-1 (ET-1). Maximal dilation revealed inward remodeling from 179±6.5 µm lumen diameter on day 0 to 151±6.3 µm on day 3 at 75 mm Hg in vessels incubated with serum (n= 8). Similarly, ET-1 induced inward remodeling from 182±5.2 to 164±3.7 µm (n= 6). When constriction during organoid culture was inhibited with papaverin or verapamil, inward remodeling was fully prevented: 184±6.3 to 184±5.8 µm for papaverin (n= 6) and 174±5.5 to 177±7.4 µm for verapamil (n= 6). A chronic reduction in diameter without tone was achieved in vessels that were kept at a low pressure (2–5 mm Hg; n= 6). Here, no remodeling was found, thereby ruling out that a chronic reduction in diameter alone is sufficient for inward remodeling. These data show that a persistent active reduction in lumen diameter is followed by inward remodeling of arterioles.
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