Angioplasty inflicts damage to the arterial wall. We studied whether augmented medial smooth muscle cell necrosis leads to augmented intimal hyperplasia and thus aggravates restenosis. Sixty-three normal femoral arteries of New Zealand White rabbits were overstretched with an angioplasty balloon during either maximal vasoconstriction with phenylephrine (32 arteries) or maximal vasodilation with nitroprusside (31 arteries). After 3 days’ survival, medial necrosis was determined as percentage of cross-sectional medial area. In the 3 weeks’ survival group, intimal hyperplasia was quantified as its average thickness. The dilation ratios, i.e. balloon diameter divided by arterial diameter at the time of dilation, were significantly higher in the 3 days’ and 3 weeks’ vasoconstriction groups (VC groups), respectively: 1.96 ± 0.10 (mean ± SD) and 2.14 ± 0.08 in the VC groups versus 1.27 ± 0.03 and 1.32 ± 0.05, respectively, in the vasodilation groups (VD groups) (both p