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Injury and repair of smaller muscular and elastic arteries
Authors:Lars Herluf Rasmussen  Charly Garbarsch  Ib Lorenzen
Institution:(1) Department of Medicine, Section of Rheumatology, Hvidovre Hospital, University of Copenhagen, DK 2650 Hvidovre;(2) Institute of Medical Anatomy, Department A, Laboratory of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, The Panum Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract:Summary 26 rabbits of the Danish country strain were subjected to mechanical dilatation injury of the left femoral and carotid arteries with Fogarty's embolectomy catheters F2 and F3 respectively. The rabbits were killed 2, 7, 14 and 28 days after the dilatation injury and the arteries examined histologically. Initially both of the arteries exhibited necrosis of the media and infiltration of the vessel wall with neutrophils and mononuclear cells. From day 7, intimal thickening was observed in both types of arteries, progressing in thickness during the later stages. However, thrombosis occurred in the majority of the carotid arteries, whereas this was only infrequently seen in the femoral arteries. In all of the dilated arteries, the elastic laminas were stretched or fragmented and never regained their normal appearance. In the carotid artery, giant cells accumulated around the fragmented elastin and calcified areas, located primarily at the intima-medial border. These changes were never observed in the femoral artery. At the twenty-eight days stage, proliferation of the smooth muscle cells more or less led to restitution of the media in the femoral artery, whereas the carotid artery showed medial restitution only to a lesser extent. The similarities between the injured carotid artery and human temporal arteritis, and the utility of the model as an animal model for the study of temporal arteritis are underlined.
Keywords:Carotid artery  Dilatation injury  Femoral artery  Rabbit  Temporal arteritis
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