The agger forms part of a complex that, in conjunction with its dedicated musculature, a reversible transmural pressure gradient and physiological turbulence in the valve sinuses, positively facilitates drainage from the local segment of the vasa venarum network when venous tone is normal; and when venous tone is elevated it pumps and sucks blood from the lumen of the vein to perfuse the vasa venarum network. When the plasma NA in the perfusate diffuses from the network, it causes a localized venodilator feedback effect that restores the elevated tone of the vein to normal. The feedback effect is potent, being estimated to reduce the venonstrictor effect of neuronal NA by about 50% when flow is laminar and considerably more when flow is turbulent. There is evidence that plasma NA may constitute the lateral inhibitory component of the NA chemostimulus of the smooth muscle cell, neuronal NA constituting the excitor component. A chronic breakdown in agger function is believed to be the cause of varicose veins.
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