Excessive Adventitial and Perivascular Vascularisation Correlates with Vascular Inflammation and Intimal Hyperplasia
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Chemistry
Molecular Biology
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Albeit multiple studies demonstrated that (VV) have a crucial importance in vascular pathology, the informative markers and metrics of vascular inflammation defining the development of intimal hyperplasia (IH) have been vaguely studied. Here, we employed two rat models (balloon injury of the abdominal aorta and the same intervention optionally complemented with intravenous injections of calciprotein particles) and a clinical scenario (arterial and venous conduits for coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery) to investigate the pathophysiological interconnections among VV, myeloperoxidase-positive (MPO) clusters, and IH. We found that the amounts of VV and MPO clusters were strongly correlated; further, MPO clusters density was significantly associated with balloon-induced IH and increased at calciprotein particle-provoked endothelial dysfunction. Likewise, number and density of VV correlated with IH in bypass grafts for CABG surgery at the pre-intervention stage and were higher in venous conduits which more frequently suffered from IH as compared with arterial grafts. Collectively, our results underline the pathophysiological importance of excessive VV upon the vascular injury or at the exposure to cardiovascular risk factors, highlight MPO clusters as an informative marker of adventitial and perivascular inflammation, and propose another mechanistic explanation of a higher long-term patency of arterial grafts upon the CABG surgery.
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