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Geometry Of Blood Vessels May
Influence Heart Disease
The geometry of blood vessels may be a
direct risk factor for developing cardiovascular disease, the cause of
almost half the deaths in the United States.
From:
Ohio
State University, September 4, 1998.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The geometry of blood vessels may be a direct risk factor
for developing cardiovascular disease, the cause of almost half the deaths
in the United States.
A new study has found a relationship linking cardiovascular disease to the
angle between an artery (which carries blood from the heart) and blood
vessels branching off from the artery. The larger the angle, the greater the
susceptibility to the build-up of plaque, which causes arteries to narrow
and can lead to cardiovascular disease.
"These plaque lesions seem to have preferences for the branching points and
the curved areas of arteries," said Morton Friedman, professor of biomedical
engineering at Ohio State University. The study was published in a recent
issue of the Journal of Biomechanics.
Friedman and Zhaohua Ding, a graduate student in biomedical engineering at
Ohio State and co-author of the study, looked at hearts from 15 cadavers.
They focused on the left anterior descending coronary artery, which supplies
the main pumping chamber of the heart with blood, and the angles of smaller
vessels branching from this artery. The geometry of these branches is
similar to that of a straight tube with a side arm.
The researchers injected the coronary arteries of each heart with radiopaque
gel. The gel allowed them to see X-ray views of the arteries from several
directions. By looking under a microscope at sections of an artery, they
found that the vessel was thicker around larger angles. "The results don't
tell us the extent to which a larger branch angle makes a person more
susceptible to developing cardiovascular disease," Friedman said.
Atherosclerosis, or narrowing of the arteries, starts as lesions form on a
vessel wall. It can happen anywhere in the body, though some arteries are
more susceptible to plaque development than are other areas of the body.
"The place that you really don't want it to happen is in the coronary
arteries," Friedman said. Atherosclerosis eventually prevents blood from
flowing to the heart muscle.
Friedman also said fluid mechanics plays an important role in vessels where
plaque deposits and lesions form. Blood flowing around a bend, or through
branches, places different shear stresses on vessel walls.
Although researchers don't fully understand the mechanism of plaque
formation, they do know that thickening is likely to begin where shear
stress is lower. The shear stress in a vessel branch depends on its angle.
Other than following routine disease-prevention measures, little can be done
about the risk factor branch angles pose. "It isn't a factor that's thought
about in the same terms as diet, exercise, cholesterol or diabetes,"
Friedman said. "You would caution a person about their 'bad' branches and
suggest things they could do to avoid potential cardiovascular disease."
The research was supported by the
National Institutes of Health. Hearts were
donated by the Ohio State's Department of Pathology, Louisiana State
University and the University of Maryland.
See also:
Duke Engineers Probing Contortions
of the Heart's Blood Vessels
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