Myogenic reactivity and resistance distribution in the coronary arterial tree: a model study
- 1 May 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Vol. 278 (5) , H1490-H1499
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.2000.278.5.h1490
Abstract
The objectives of this study were to evaluate the myogenic behavior of blood vessels and their interaction within the coronary arterial tree and to evaluate the possible role of the myogenic response in autoregulation. The model consists of 10 compartments in series, each representing a class of vessel sizes. Diameter and resistance in each class are determined by their value at full dilation ( d p, R p) and by the myogenic response. Three distributions of R p and three distributions of myogenic strength, M i (slope of pressure-diameter curve, range −0.05 to −0.4%/mmHg) were evaluated (9 cases). It was found that larger vessels attenuate the myogenic activity of smaller vessels and that myogenic responsiveness is sufficient to achieve autoregulation. When M i has a maximum in vessels of 84 μm, the maximum effect of perfusion pressure on active diameter occurs in vessels between 123 and 181 μm, depending on the distribution of R p. Distribution of resistance and control mechanisms in the coronary arterial tree are important for interpretation of individual vessel responses as observed in vivo.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resistance to blood flow in microvessels in vivo.Circulation Research, 1994
- Branching patterns in the porcine coronary arterial tree. Estimation of flow heterogeneity.Circulation Research, 1992
- Microvascular pressures and resistances in the left ventricular subepicardium and subendocardium.Circulation Research, 1991
- Coronary microvascular responses to reductions in perfusion pressure. Evidence for persistent arteriolar vasomotor tone during coronary hypoperfusion.Circulation Research, 1990
- Coronary arteriolar myogenic response is independent of endothelium.Circulation Research, 1990
- Heterogeneous changes in epimyocardial microvascular size during graded coronary stenosis. Evidence of the microvascular site for autoregulation.Circulation Research, 1990
- Comparison of the effects of increased myocardial oxygen consumption and adenosine on the coronary microvascular resistance.Circulation Research, 1989
- EDRF coordinates the behaviour of vascular resistance vesselsNature, 1987
- Autoregulation of the coronary circulationProgress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 1987
- Control of Coronary Blood Flow by an Autoregulatory MechanismCirculation Research, 1964