6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c1b92

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Intravascular pillars and pruning in the extraembryonic vessels of chick embryos.

Grace S. LeeBarry C. GibneyAkira TsudaMoritz A. KonerdingNenad FilipovicNenad FilipovicSteven J. MentzerDinee C. SimpsonMiao Lin

subject

PeriodicityExtraembryonic MembranesNeovascularization PhysiologicChick EmbryoBiologyArticleMicrocirculationsymbols.namesakeMicroscopyShear stressAnimalsStreamlines streaklines and pathlinesComputer SimulationReynolds numberEndothelial CellsBlood flowAnatomyShear (sheet metal)Regional Blood FlowsymbolsBlood Vesselssense organsStress MechanicalCorrosion CastingDevelopmental BiologyBiomedical engineering

description

To investigate the local mechanical forces associated with intravascular pillars and vessel pruning, we studied the conducting vessels in the extraembryonic circulation of the chick embryo. During the development days 13-17, intravascular pillars and blood flow parameters were identified using fluorescent vascular tracers and digital time-series video reconstructions. The geometry of selected vessels was confirmed by corrosion casting and scanning electron microscopy. Computational simulations of pruning vessels suggested that serial pillars form along pre-existing velocity streamlines; blood pressure demonstrated no obvious spatial relationship with the intravascular pillars. Modeling a Reynolds number of 0.03 produced 4 pillars at approximately 20-μm intervals matching the observed periodicity. In contrast, a Reynolds number of 0.06 produced only 2 pillars at approximately 63-μm intervals. Our modeling data indicated that the combination of wall shear stress and gradient of shear predicted the location, direction, and periodicity of developing pillars.

10.1002/dvdy.22618https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21448976