Publication | Closed Access
Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 Increases Collateral and Peripheral Conductance After Femoral Artery Occlusion
470
Citations
45
References
1997
Year
Monocytes are activated during collateral artery growth, and MCP‑1 is upregulated by shear stress. The study tested whether MCP‑1 infusion enhances collateral growth after femoral artery occlusion in rabbits. Rabbits were treated with MCP‑1, PBS, or no infusion via osmotic minipump, and after seven days hindlimb perfusion with autologous blood measured flow and pressure to compute collateral and peripheral conductances. MCP‑1 markedly increased collateral growth in the thigh and raised both collateral and peripheral conductances to near‑normal levels within one week, indicating monocyte activation promotes collateral remodeling and capillary sprouting.
Abstract Monocytes are activated during collateral artery growth in vivo, and monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) has been shown to be upregulated by shear stress in vitro. In order to investigate whether MCP-1 enhances collateral growth after femoral artery occlusion, 12 rabbits were randomly assigned to receive either MCP-1, PBS, or no local infusion via osmotic minipump. Seven days after occlusion, isolated hindlimbs were perfused with autologous blood at different pressures, measuring flows at maximal vasodilation via flow probe and radioactive microspheres, as well as peripheral pressures. This allowed the calculation of collateral (thigh) and peripheral (lower limb) conductances from pressure-flow tracings (slope of the curve). Collateral growth on postmortem angiograms was restricted to the thigh and was markedly enhanced with MCP-1 treatment. Both collateral and peripheral conductances were significantly elevated in animals with MCP-1 treatment compared with the control group, reaching values of nonoccluded hindlimbs after only 1 week of occlusion (collateral conductance, 70.6±19.23 versus 25.1±2.59 mL/min per 100 mm Hg; P <.01; peripheral conductance, 119.3±22.37 versus 45.4±6.80 mL/min per 100 mm Hg; P <.05). These results suggest that activation of monocytes plays an important role in collateral growth as well as in capillary sprouting.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1