Department of Engineering Technology, University of Houston, Houston, USA.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2010 Dec;299(6):H1875-83. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00872.2009. Epub 2010 Sep 17.
Elucidating early time courses of biomechanical responses by arteries to altered mechanical stimuli is paramount to understanding and eventually predicting long-term adaptations. In a previous study, we reported marked long-term (at 35-56 days) consequences of increased pulsatile hemodynamics on arterial structure and mechanics. Motivated by those findings, we focus herein on arterial responses over shorter periods (at 7, 10, and 14 days) following placement of a constrictive band on the aortic arch between the innominate and left carotid arteries of wild-type mice, which significantly increases pulsatility in the right carotid artery. We quantified hemodynamics in vivo using noninvasive ultrasound and measured wall properties and composition in vitro using biaxial mechanical testing and standard (immuno)histology. Compared with both baseline carotid arteries and left carotids after banding, right carotids after banding experienced a significant increase in both pulse pressure, which peaked at day 7, and a pulsatility index for velocity, which continued to rise over the 42-day study despite a transient increase in mean flow that peaked at day 7. Wall thickness and inner diameter also increased significantly in the right carotids, both peaking at day 14, with an associated marked early reduction in the in vivo axial stretch and a persistent decrease in smooth muscle contractility. Glycosaminoglycan content also increased within the wall, peaking at day 14, whereas increases in monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 activity and the collagen-to-elastin ratio continued to rise. These findings confirm that pulsatility is an important modulator of wall geometry, structure, and properties but reveal different early time courses for different microscopic and macroscopic metrics, presumably due to the separate degrees of influence of pressure and flow.
阐明动脉对机械刺激改变的早期生物力学反应对于理解并最终预测长期适应性至关重要。在之前的研究中,我们报告了脉动血流动力学增加对动脉结构和力学的显著长期(35-56 天)影响。受这些发现的启发,我们在此重点关注动脉在放置主动脉弓上的收缩带后较短时间(7、10 和 14 天)的反应,这会显著增加右颈动脉的脉动性。我们使用非侵入性超声在体内量化血流动力学,并使用双向力学测试和标准(免疫)组织学在体外测量壁特性和组成。与基线颈动脉和带后左颈动脉相比,带后右颈动脉的脉搏压(在第 7 天达到峰值)和速度脉动指数均显著增加,尽管在第 7 天达到峰值的平均流量短暂增加,但在 42 天的研究中持续上升。右颈动脉的壁厚度和内径也显著增加,均在第 14 天达到峰值,同时体内轴向拉伸显著早期减少,平滑肌收缩力持续下降。壁内糖胺聚糖含量也增加,在第 14 天达到峰值,而单核细胞趋化蛋白-1 活性和胶原-弹性蛋白比值的增加持续上升。这些发现证实了脉动性是壁几何形状、结构和特性的重要调节剂,但揭示了不同的微观和宏观指标的早期时间过程不同,这可能是由于压力和流量的单独影响程度不同。