Search results for "Vascular architecture"
showing 6 items of 6 documents
Optimized Mouse Models for Liver Fibrosis
2017
Fibrosis is the excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix components due to chronic injury, with collagens as predominant structural components. Liver fibrosis can progress to cirrhosis, which is characterized by a severe distortion of the delicate hepatic vascular architecture, the shunting of the blood supply away from hepatocytes and the resultant functional liver failure. Cirrhosis is associated with a highly increased morbidity and mortality and represents the major hard endpoint in clinical studies of chronic liver diseases. Moreover, cirrhosis is a strong cofactor of primary liver cancer. In vivo models are indispensable tools to study the cellular and molecular mechanisms of li…
Three-dimensional analysis of tumour vascular corrosion casts using stereoimaging and micro-computed tomography
2009
Objective: In order to perform effective translational research for cancer therapy, we need to employ preclinical models which reflect the clinical situation. The purpose of this study was to quantitatively compare the vascular architecture of human colorectal cancer and experimental tumour models to determine the suitability of animal models for vascular studies and antivascular therapy.Methods: In this study we investigated the three-dimensional properties of colonic tumour vasculature in both human clinical tissues (normal mucosa control [n = 20], carcinoma [n = 20] and adenoma In = 61) and murine colorectal xenografts (LS147T [n = 6] and SW1222 [n = 6]). Scanning Electron Microscope Ste…
3D microvascular architecture of pre-cancerous lesions and invasive carcinomas of the colon.
2001
Despite the significance of tumour neoangiogenesis and the extensive knowledge on the molecular basis of blood vessel formation currently no quantitative data exist on the 3D microvascular architecture in human primary tumours and their precursor lesions. This prompted us to examine the 3D vascular network of normal colon mucosa, adenomas and invasive carcinomas by means of quantitative microvascular corrosion casting. Fresh hemicolectomy specimens from 20 patients undergoing cancer or polyposis coli surgery were used for corrosion casting, factor VIII and VEGF immunostaining. In addition, immunostaining was done on colorectal tissue from 33 patients with metastatic and non-metastatic carci…
Evidence for characteristic vascular patterns in solid tumours: quantitative studies using corrosion casts
1999
The vascular architecture of four different tumour cell lines (CaX, CaNT, SaS, HEC-1B) transplanted subcutaneously in mice was examined by means of microvascular corrosion casting in order to determine whether there is a characteristic vascular pattern for different tumour types and whether it differs significantly from two normal tissues, muscle and gut. Three-dimensional reconstructed scanning electron microscope images were used for quantitative measurements. Vessel diameters, intervessel and interbranch distances showed large differences between tumour types, whereas the branching angles were similar. In all tumours, the variability of the vessel diameters was significantly higher than …
Coronary drainage in theOctopus vulgaris systemic heart
1990
The vascular architecture of the coronary system of the systemic heart of the octopus (Octopus vulgaris) has been studied by means of both the corrosion-cast method and scanning electron microscopy. It is shown that the Octopus systemic heart myocardium is supplied through a very rich capillary network, the complexity of which probably reflects the complex organization of the ventricular wall. Drainage occurs by way of a classic venous system that originates from this capillary network. Morphological evidences are reported indicating that the coronary bed communicates directly with the ventricular lumen. In the isolated perfused systemic heart, the flow through this system is related direct…
Pulmonary microvascular architecture in hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia
2017
A 24-year-old Caucasian man was admitted with a known hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) and heterozygous mutation of factor V Leiden following episodes of cerebral infarctions in occipital lobes, cerebellum and brainstem. In his case history, the patient underwent several interventional embolisation of arteriovenous (AV) malformations in the middle and lower lobes (figure 1). However, those were not completely successful as the malformations were diffuse. We performed video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery with a resection of the middle lobe and a wedge resection of segment 10. Figure 1 CT scans depict the pulmonary arteriovenous malformations after re-embolisation in the middle lo…