Laminar structure of the heart: ventricular myocyte arrangement and connective tissue architecture in the dog

IJ LeGrice, BH Smaill, LZ Chai… - American Journal …, 1995 - journals.physiology.org
IJ LeGrice, BH Smaill, LZ Chai, SG Edgar, JB Gavin, PJ Hunter
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 1995journals.physiology.org
We have studied the three-dimensional arrangement of ventricular muscle cells and the
associated extracellular connective tissue matrix in dog hearts. Four hearts were potassium-
arrested, excised, and perfusion-fixed at zero transmural pressure. Full-thickness segments
were cut from the right and left ventricular walls at a series of precisely located sites.
Morphology was visualized macroscopically and with scanning electron microscopy in 1)
transmural planes of section and 2) planes tangential to the epicardial surface. The …
We have studied the three-dimensional arrangement of ventricular muscle cells and the associated extracellular connective tissue matrix in dog hearts. Four hearts were potassium-arrested, excised, and perfusion-fixed at zero transmural pressure. Full-thickness segments were cut from the right and left ventricular walls at a series of precisely located sites. Morphology was visualized macroscopically and with scanning electron microscopy in 1) transmural planes of section and 2) planes tangential to the epicardial surface. The appearance of all specimens was consistent with an ordered laminar arrangement of myocytes with extensive cleavage planes between muscle layers. These planes ran radially from endocardium toward epicardium in transmural section and coincided with the local muscle fiber orientation in tangential section. Stereological techniques were used to quantify aspects of this organization. There was no consistent variation in the cellular organization of muscle layers (48.4 +/- 20.4 microns thick and 4 +/- 2 myocytes across) transmurally or in different ventricular regions (23 sites in 6 segments), but there was significant transmural variation in the coupling between adjacent layers. The number of branches between layers decreased twofold from subepicardium to midwall, whereas the length distribution of perimysial collagen fibers connecting muscle layers was greatest in the midwall. We conclude that ventricular myocardium is not a uniformly branching continuum but a laminar hierarchy in which it is possible to identify three axes of material symmetry at any point.
American Physiological Society