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Structural Skin Capillary Rarefaction in Essential Hypertension
Author(s) -
Tarek Antonios,
Donald R.J. Singer,
Nirmala D. Markandu,
Peter Mortimer,
Graham A. MacGregor
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
hypertension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.986
H-Index - 265
eISSN - 1524-4563
pISSN - 0194-911X
DOI - 10.1161/01.hyp.33.4.998
Subject(s) - microcirculation , medicine , essential hypertension , capillary action , rarefaction (ecology) , blood pressure , dorsum , video microscopy , intravital microscopy , peripheral , cardiology , anatomy , materials science , biology , ecology , species diversity , composite material , microbiology and biotechnology
A reduction in the density of capillaries (rarefaction) is known to occur in many tissues in patients with essential hypertension. This rarefaction may play a role in increasing peripheral resistance. However, the mechanism underlying this capillary rarefaction is not understood. The aim of this study was to assess the extent of structural versus functional capillary rarefaction in the skin of dorsum of fingers in essential hypertension. The capillary microcirculation was examined with video microscopy before and after maximizing the number of perfused capillaries by venous congestion. The study group comprised 17 patients with essential hypertension (mean supine blood pressure, 155/96 mm Hg) and 17 closely matched normotensive controls (mean blood pressure, 127/77 mm Hg). We used intravital video microscopy with an epi-illuminated microscope to examine the skin of the dorsum of left middle phalanx before and after venous congestion at 60 mm Hg for 2 minutes. A significantly lower mean capillary density occurred at baseline in hypertensive subjects versus normotensive subjects. With venous occlusion, capillary density increased significantly in both groups; however, maximal capillary density remained significantly lower in the hypertensive subjects than in the normotensive subjects. The study strongly suggests that much of the reduction in capillary density in the hypertensive subjects is caused by structural (anatomic) absence of capillaries rather than functional nonperfusion.

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