• Title of article

    Modifications induced by atherogenic diet in the capacity of the arterial wall in rats to respond to surgical insult

  • Author/Authors

    Julia Buj?n، نويسنده , , Juan M. Bell?n، نويسنده , , Cristina Sabater، نويسنده , , Francisca Jurado، نويسنده , , Natalio Garc?a-Honduvilla، نويسنده , , Belén Dom?nguez، نويسنده , , Eduardo Jorge-Herrero، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    141
  • To page
    152
  • Abstract
    A study was made of events occurring in the arterial wall of the rat after administration of an atherogenic, calcification-inducing diet and of vascular response in a model of combined metabolic aggression (atherogenic, calcification-inducing diet) and surgical aggression (adventitial resection). Female Sprague-Dawley rats were fed an atherogenic, calcification-inducing diet for 24 consecutive days, after which half the rats returned to standard diet (group I, n = 12) and the other half (group II) underwent resection of the adventitia on a segment of common iliac artery on day 25 before returning to standard diet. Normolipemic rats and rats that underwent adventitial resection without the atherogenic, calcification-inducing diet were used as the control groups. The rats were killed at 10 min, 1 and 24 h, 5, 14, 21, 30, 50, 70, 90, 120 and 180 days. Morphologic studies were made with light microscopy and electron microscopy (scanning and transmission), as well as biochemical studies. Monocyte adherence and infiltration of the arterial intima, thickening of the subintimal space, the presence of monocyte-macrophages, calcification in the medial layer, intense adventitial fibrosis, and vacuolization of the endothelial cells of the adventitial microvessels were common findings in the two groups receiving the atherogenic, calcification-inducing diet. However, these groups differed in the intensity of calcification: the deep part of the medial layer did not become calcified when the adventitia was resected. Moreover, adventitial regeneration was delayed in group II with respect to the animals that underwent adventitial resection without atherogenic, calcification-inducing diet. We conclude that this diet induced atherosclerotic lesions in the vessel wall and inhibited adventitial regeneration in the rats that underwent resection.
  • Keywords
    Intimal hyperplasia , Atherogenesis , rats , Atheroma plaques , Adventitia
  • Journal title
    Atherosclerosis
  • Serial Year
    1996
  • Journal title
    Atherosclerosis
  • Record number

    628017