Vol. 283, Issue 5, R1118-R1130, November 2002
"Sausage-string" appearance of arteries and arterioles
can be caused by an instability of the blood vessel wall
Jens Christian Brings
Jacobsen1,
Ulrik
Beierholm2,
Rene
Mikkelsen2,
Finn
Gustafsson1,
Preben
Alstrøm2, and
Niels-Henrik
Holstein-Rathlou1
1 Department of Medical Physiology, The University of
Copenhagen, DK-2200 Copenhagen N; and 2 The Niels Bohr
Institute, The University of Copenhagen, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø,
Denmark
Vascular damage
induced by acute hypertension is preceded by a peculiar pattern where
blood vessels show alternating regions of constrictions and dilations
("sausages on a string"). The pattern occurs in the smaller blood
vessels, and it plays a central role in causing the vascular damage. A
related vascular pattern has been observed in larger vessels from
several organs during angiography. In the larger vessels the occurrence
of the pattern does not appear to be related to acute hypertension. A
unifying feature between the phenomenon in large and small vessels
seems to be an increase in vascular wall tension. Despite much
research, the mechanisms underlying the sausage pattern have remained
unknown. Here we present an anisotropic model of the vessel wall and
show that the sausage pattern can arise because of an instability of
the vessel wall. The model reproduces many of the key features observed experimentally. Most importantly, it suggests that the "sausaging" phenomenon is neither caused by a mechanical failure of the vessel wall
due to a high blood pressure nor is it due to standing pressure waves
caused by the beating of the heart. Rather, it is the expression of a
general instability phenomenon. Experimental data suggest that the
structural changes induced by the instability may cause secondary
damage to the wall of small arteries and arterioles in the form of
endothelial hyperpermeability followed by local fibrinoid necrosis of
the vascular wall.
hypertension; vascular damage; rat; mathematical model