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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (
thinning
)
11,252
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate the feasibility of detecting denervated myocardium in the infarcted canine heart, the distribution of sympathetic nerve endings using I-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) was compared with the distribution of perfusion using thallium-201, with the aid of color-coded computer functional map in 16 dogs. Twelve dogs underwent myocardial infarction by injection of vinyl latex into the left anterior descending coronary artery (transmural myocardial infarction, n = 6), or ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery (nontransmural myocardial infarction, n = 6). Four dogs served as sham-operated controls. Image patterns were compared with tissue norepinephrine content and with histofluorescence microscopic findings in biopsy specimens. Hearts with transmural infarction showed zones of absent MIBG and thallium, indicating scar. Adjacent and distal regions showed reduced MIBG but normal thallium uptake, indicating viable but denervated myocardium. Denervation distal to infarction was confirmed by reduced norepinephrine content and absence of nerve fluorescence. Nontransmural myocardial infarction showed zones of wall
thinning
with decreased thallium uptake and a greater reduction or absence of MIBG localized to the region of the infarct, with minimal extension of denervation beyond the infarct.
Norepinephrine
content was significantly reduced in the infarct zone, and nerve fluorescence was absent. These findings suggest that 1) MIBG imaging can detect viable and perfused but denervated myocardium after infarction; and 2) as opposed to the distal denervation produced by transmural infarction, nontransmural infarction may lead to regional ischemic damage of sympathetic nerves, but may spare subepicardial nerve trunks that course through the region of infarction to provide a source of innervation to distal areas of myocardium.
...
PMID:Scintigraphic assessment of sympathetic innervation after transmural versus nontransmural myocardial infarction. 201 61
Despite growing clinical use of transluminal balloon angioplasty (TBA) to treat cerebral vasospasm after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), the precise mechanism of action of balloon dilation on the cerebral arterial wall is unknown. In this experiment the authors examined the pharmacological and morphological changes in 10 normal and 12 vasospastic canine basilar arteries following in vitro silicone microballoon TBA. For the SAH group in which the double-hemorrhage model was used, vasospasm was confirmed by angiography and the animals were killed on Day 7 after the first SAH. In vitro TBA was performed on basilar arteries from normal and SAH dogs immediately after sacrifice and removal of the brain. The procedure was performed while the arteries were maintained in oxygenated Krebs buffer. In the pharmacological studies, potassium chloride, prostaglandin F2 alpha, serotonin, and
noradrenaline
were used as vasoconstrictors, and bradykinin and calcium ionophore A23187 were used to produce an endothelium-dependent dilation. In both normal and vasospastic groups, the pharmacological responses of dilated segments of basilar arteries were compared to those of nondilated segments of the same arteries. Vessels from all groups were examined using scanning electron microscopy (EM) and transmission EM. Scanning EM was used to study the intact vessel wall, the smooth-muscle cell layer obtained after digestion with hydrochloric acid, and the extracellular matrix obtained after digestion with bleach. Cross-sections of the vessel wall were examined using transmission EM. The most striking finding was that immediately after in vitro TBA of both normal and vasospastic canine basilar arteries, there was a significant reduction (p < 0.05) of responses to both vasoconstrictors and vasorelaxants. As revealed by scanning EM and transmission EM, both normal and vasospastic vessels dilated with TBA showed flattening and patchy denudation of the endothelium, and straightening and occasional rupturing of the internal elastic lamina. In addition, vasospastic vessels dilated with TBA showed decreased surface rippling and mild stretching and straightening of smooth-muscle cells, and mild
thinning
of the tunica media. There was no gross vascular disruption or obvious change in the extracellular matrix of the vessel walls of either normal or vasospastic arteries after TBA. These results suggest that functional impairment of vasoreactivity in the vessel wall as a result of mechanical stretching of the smooth-muscle layer plays a more important role than structural alteration, at least in the immediate dilation produced in vasospastic arteries by TBA.
...
PMID:Pharmacological and morphological effects of in vitro transluminal balloon angioplasty on normal and vasospastic canine basilar arteries. 766 32
Although the pathophysiology of critical limb ischaemia is poorly understood, there is evidence that the condition of the small arteries may determine the outcome of revascularization procedures. This study was designed to investigate the effects of critical limb ischaemia on the structure and function of the small arteries in the leg. Small arteries (<500 microm) from proximal (non-ischaemic) and distal (ischaemic) sites were obtained from patients undergoing bypass surgery for critical limb ischaemia and mounted in a myograph. Reactivity and morphological measurements were carried out and compared with controls. Control vessels from the thigh and calf showed no difference in media to lumen ratio. However, a comparison of ischaemic and non-ischaemic vessels from the patients with critical limb ischaemia showed significant
thinning
of the ischaemic vessel wall. Contraction studies using
noradrenaline
and angiotensin II revealed a significant decrease in the response of ischaemic vessels compared with the non-ischaemic vessels from the same patient. Moreover, these differences in reactivity were still apparent after the responses were corrected for wall thickness. Endothelial function assessed using the endothelium-dependent agonists acetylcholine and bradykinin showed a significantly impaired relaxation response to acetylcholine but not to bradykinin in the ischaemic vessels, and acetylcholine-induced relaxation was not improved after incubation with indomethacin. There was no change in the response to the endothelium-independent cAMP-mediated vasodilator iloprost but a significant impairment to sodium nitroprusside which acts via cGMP. These results suggest that small arteries in critical limb ischaemia are altered in both structure and function, with vessel wall
thinning
and impaired responses to acetylcholine and sodium nitroprusside.
...
PMID:Altered small artery morphology and reactivity in critical limb ischaemia. 991 95