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Disturbed blood flow induces erosive injury to smooth muscle cell‐rich neointima and promotes thrombus formation in rabbit femoral arteries
Author(s) -
SUMI T.,
YAMASHITA A.,
MATSUDA S.,
GOTO S.,
NISHIHIRA K.,
FURUKOJI E.,
SUGIMURA H.,
KAWAHARA H.,
IMAMURA T.,
KITAMURA K.,
TAMURA S.,
ASADA Y.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of thrombosis and haemostasis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.947
H-Index - 178
eISSN - 1538-7836
pISSN - 1538-7933
DOI - 10.1111/j.1538-7836.2010.03843.x
Subject(s) - neointima , thrombus , fibrin , medicine , platelet , vascular smooth muscle , blood flow , anatomy , pathology , cardiology , restenosis , smooth muscle , stent , immunology
Summary.  Background:  Plaque erosion is a cause of atherothrombosis that preferentially occurs on smooth muscle cell (SMC)‐ and proteoglycan‐rich rather than lipid‐rich plaques. However, its underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Objective:  To determine whether disturbed blood flow induces erosive injury and thrombus formation on SMC‐rich neointima. Methods:  Three weeks after balloon injury, SMC‐rich neointima with increased tissue factor (TF) activity developed in rabbit femoral arteries that were narrowed with a vascular occluder to disturb blood flow after stenosis. Neointimal injury and thrombus formation were assessed at 15, 30, and 180 min after the vascular narrowing. Results:  Endothelial detachment, platelet adhesion and neointimal cell apoptosis became evident at the post‐stenotic regions of all femoral arteries ( n  = 5) within 15 min of narrowing. Mural thrombi composed of platelet and fibrin developed after 30 min, and then occlusive thrombi were generated in three out of five vessels after 180 min. The identical vascular narrowing of normal femoral arteries also induced endothelial detachment with small platelet thrombi at post‐stenotic regions, but fibrin and occlusive thrombi did not develop. Computational simulation analysis indicated that oscillatory shear stress contributes to the development of erosive damage to the neointima. Conclusions:  These results suggest that disturbed post‐stenotic blood flow can induce erosive injury in SMC‐rich plaques and promote thrombus formation that results in vascular events.

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