Effects of Hypoxia and Hyperoxia on Progression of Intimal Healing
- 1 June 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 118 (6) , 732-737
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1983.01390060050011
Abstract
• To assess the effect of changes in inspired oxygen concentration on intimal healing, the aorta was stripped by a single passage of an inflated embolectomy catheter in 34 rabbits. Each then was maintained in a controlled-atmosphere cage with a normobaric oxygen concentration of 14%, 21%, or 40% for up to ten days. Although after six months all animals showed nearly normal aortic healing, the progression of healing was considerably different. Hypoxia appears to result in prolonged platelet adherence, exaggerated medial proliferation, and aberrant migration. Hyperoxia appears to allow a more orderly intimalization. An aberrant healing process secondary to tissue hypoxia when combined with exacerbating factors may be important in producing the unfavorable result in vascular surgery. (Arch Surg 1983;118:732-737)This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Endothelial injury and atherosclerosisExperimental and Molecular Pathology, 1979
- UNSTABLE METABOLITES OF ARACHIDONIC ACID AND THEIR ROLE IN HAEMOSTASIS AND THROMBOSISBritish Medical Bulletin, 1978
- ATHEROGENIC POTENTIAL OF EMBOLECTOMY CATHETER1978
- Scanning electron microscopy: Morphology of aortic endothelium following injury by endotoxin and during subsequent repairAtherosclerosis, 1977
- SERIAL CHANGES IN ARTERIAL ENDOTHELIUM FOLLOWING ISCHEMIA AND PERFUSION1977
- Resolution of Lipid-Containing Atherosclerotic Lesions Induced by InjuryJournal of Vascular Research, 1977
- Effects of intermittent and continuous hypoxia on the aortic wall in rabbitsAtherosclerosis, 1975
- Thrombosis, atherosclerosis, and endotheliumAmerican Heart Journal, 1974
- Oxygen diffusion and atherosclerosisAtherosclerosis, 1974
- The Comparative Hypoxic Resistance of Hibernators and NonhibernatorsPhysiological Zoology, 1950