Publication | Closed Access
Effect of pulsatile shear stress on endothelial attachment to native vascular surfaces
27
Citations
41
References
1994
Year
EngineeringEndothelial CellsNative Vascular SurfacesBiomedical EngineeringBlood FlowRegenerative MedicineBiomechanicsSeeded Endothelial CellsEndothelial AttachmentAtherosclerosisCapillary NetworkMechanobiologyVascular AdaptationVascular DamageVascular BiologyNeovascularizationBiomedical FlowPhysiologyEndothelial DysfunctionWound HealingMedicinePulsatile Shear StressAnesthesiology
An in vitro model of vascular damage was used to investigate the ability of seeded endothelial cells to resist shear stresses generated in a perfusion circuit. At perfusion rates of 100 ml/min the maximum shear stress reached 16.5 dyn/cm2. At this level the rate of cell detachment from the damaged vascular surface was 88 per cent per h for the first 20 min of flow but gradually decreased to 5 per cent per h after 90 min. These findings suggest that endothelial cells may be retained on damaged vascular surfaces in conditions that approximate to arterial flow.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1