Arterial adaptations to altered blood flow

Abstract
Arterial remodeling in response to altered blood flow is believed to be critical to vascular adaptations to developmental, physiological, pathological, and therapeutically induced changes in blood flow. To assess this remodeling, we used left-to-right carotid anastomosis to increase blood flow in the right common carotid arteries of adult rabbits by 60%. After 2 months, these vessels exhibited no compensatory enlargement. In contrast, the same procedure performed in 5- to 6-week-old weanling rabbits resulted in accelerated growth of the vessels: diameters exceeded those of control arteries by 19% after 2 months. Common carotid arteries in adult rabbits remodeled to produce a diameter reduced by 23% when blood flow was reduced by 63% by external carotid ligation. This adaptation restored shear stress exerted on the vessel wall to control levels. The reduced diameter was not reversed when the vessels were maximally dilated with nitroprusside, adenosine, and forskolin; however, normal diameters were restored within 1 week when normal blood flows were reestablished. Thus, the adult arteries did not respond to increased blood flow produced by the anastomosis, but this procedure did reverse adaptations to decreased flow. In contrast, immature arteries were responsive to this increase in blood flow, even in the absence of prior flow modulation.

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