The risk of rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm increases with aortic diameter. To obtain insight into the pathological processes associated with the vascular remodeling that accompanies aortic dilatation, we compared the histological features and the activity of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in biopsies from 21 small (4.0 to 5.5 cm in diameter) and 45 larger abdominal aortic aneurysms. The histological feature most clearly associated with enlarging aneurysm diameter was a higher density of inflammatory cells in the adventitia, P = .018. This inflammation was nonspecific, principally macrophages and B lymphocytes. Fibrosis of the adventitia provided compensatory thickening of the aortic wall as the aneurysm diameter increased. A combination of zymography and immunoblotting identified gelatinase A (MMP-2) as the principal metallogelatinase in small aneurysms, whereas zymography indicated an increasing activity of gelatinase B (MMP-9) in large aneurysms. Homogenates prepared from both small and large aneurysms had similar total activity against gelatin or type IV collagen. However, the concentration of gelatinase A, determined by immunoassay, was highest for small aneurysms: median concentrations, 385, 244, and 166 ng/mg protein for small aneurysms, large aneurysms, and atherosclerotic aorta, respectively. Immunolocalization studies indicated that gelatinase A was concentrated along fibrous tissue of both the acellular media and the atherosclerotic plaque. The recruitment of inflammatory cells into the adventitia, with subsequent elaboration of metalloproteinases, including gelatinase B, may contribute to the rapid growth and rupture of larger aneurysms.
Smoking impairs the endothelium-dependent relaxation of arteries and veins, with the maximum relaxation in response to the calcium ionophore A23187 of saphenous vein rings being reduced from 53 +/- 4% in nonsmokers to 27 +/- 5% in smokers. We have investigated whether this endothelial dysfunction was attributable to altered activity or concentration of nitric oxide synthase (NOS). The concentration of NOS in saphenous vein endothelium, determined by Western blotting and immunohistochemistry, was not different in nonsmokers and smokers. Nitrite production from vein strips stimulated with A23187 was higher in nonsmokers (median 23.6 nmol.cm-2.h-1) than smokers (median 3.3 nmol.cm-2.h-1), P=.001, this difference being abolished when vein strips were preincubated in the presence of NG-monomethyl-L-arginine. Organ chamber studies to monitor the endothelium-dependent relaxation of vein rings in response to A23187 showed that preincubation of rings from smokers with either L-arginine (3mmol/L) or superoxide dismutase (250 U/mL) did not improve the maximum relaxation. In contrast, preincubation of vein rings from smokers with 20 micromol/L tetrahydrobiopterin increased the maximum relaxation from 27 +/- 5% to 51 +/- 6%, P=.01. Preincubation of vein from smokers with tetrahydrobiopterin also significantly increased nitrite and cGMP production in response to stimulation with A23187. The impaired endothelium-dependent relaxation of saphenous vein rings from smokers appears to be caused by a reduction in the activity of endothelial NOS that is attributable to an inadequate supply of the coenzyme tetrahydrobiopterin.
Abdominal aortic aneurysms are characterized by intimal atherosclerosis, disruption and attenuation of the elastic media, and a variable adventitial inflammatory infiltrate. We have developed an animal model of this disorder to evaluate the contribution of hypercholesterolemia, medial injury, and adventitial inflammation to aneurysmal dilatation. To accomplish this, we used periaortic application of calcium chloride, which induced both medial injury with calcification and endothelial injury. Ultrasonography was used to demonstrate the dilatation and thickening of the aortic wall. Over the first 3 weeks after periaortic application of 0.25 mol/L CaCl2, the external aortic diameter increased from 3.5 +/- 0.5 to 4.2 +/- 0.8 mm, but the ID remained unchanged. This apparent wall thickening was accompanied by vascular remodeling, and biochemical changes included approximately 50% reduction in tissue hydroxyproline concentration and increased activity of gelatinases (matrix metalloproteinase [MMP]-2 and MMP-9). Independently, cholesterol feeding to induce hypercholesterolemia or the concomitant periaortic application of thioglycollate had little effect on the histological, biochemical, or diameter changes. Together, hypercholesterolemia and thioglycollate were associated with rapid aortic dilatation in CaCl2, treated animals but not controls: after 3 weeks, the ID and OD had doubled, the OD increasing from 3.5 +/- 0.4 to 7.1 +/- 0.4 mm, P = .005. The remarkable feature that accompanied this dilatation was the infiltration of cells, mostly foamy macrophages, into the adventitia, with a further reduction in hydroxyproline concentration. Adventitial inflammation may provide the critical stimulus to dilatation of an aorta with preexisting intimal and medial injury.
Samples of proximal saphenous vein were obtained from heavy smokers and non-smokers: 28 were obtained at varicose vein surgery and eight at infrainguinal bypass surgery. The veins were prepared for histological examination and for mounting in an organ bath to measure changes in isometric tension. Vein rings from both smokers and non-smokers responded equally to sodium nitroprusside, a reagent that acts directly on smooth muscle cells, undergoing 90-100 per cent relaxation. The mean(s.e.m.) maximum relaxation in response to bradykinin of rings obtained at varicose vein surgery was 50.0(5.3) per cent in non-smokers compared with only 31.6(2.2) per cent in smokers (P = 0.03). Similarly, in specimens obtained at bypass surgery the mean(s.e.m.) maximum relaxation in smokers was only 25.1(6.3) per cent compared with 48.4(4.1) per cent in smokers (P = 0.04). Relaxation in response to the bradykinin stimulus was abolished in the presence of L-nitroarginine methyl ester, a specific inhibitor of the synthesis of endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF). Preincubation of the vein rings with L-arginine, the precursor of EDRF, did not increase the vasorelaxation in smokers. The mean(s.e.m.) maximum relaxation in response to the calcium ionophore A23187 was 53.5(3.8) per cent in non-smokers compared with only 27.0(4.9) per cent in smokers (P = 0.01). The results indicate that heavy smokers have impaired release of EDRF in response to both bradykinin and calcium ionophore. This impairment may increase vasomotor tone, platelet aggregation and smooth muscle proliferation, thereby resulting in an increased risk of graft occlusion.
Cerebral microemboli were controlled by tirofiban both before and after CEA. Further study is required to compare the relative efficacy of tirofiban and dextran.
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