As an attempt to investigate the different pathways followed by the blood into the spleen and to analyse their functional significance, a technique was used mainly based on the intraarterial perfusion of a Prussian blue "solution" added of some chemical mediators and vasoactive substances. Such technique provides results which may be analysed taking into account the effect of the anaesthetic used, that may influence the findings. From the anaesthetic used, the sulfuric ether and the barbital sodium produce vasoconstriction of the white pulp blood vessels, whereas the chlorpromazine-promethazine doesn't have this effect, and so the Prussian blue appears inside these vessels. The vasodilator drugs, such as succinonitrile and papaverine hydrochloride, show a general vasodilator effect on the splenic arterial system. Teh arterial vessels of the white and the red pulp, including those placed at the subcapsular areas, become enlarged; into the white pulp, either the central or the peripheral blood vessel plexus of the lymphatic follicle becomes evident. The latter readily constitutes the perifollicular and the pericolumnar plexus. The blood vessels of this plexus become permeable to the Prussian blue "solution" by the heparin sodium effect, and so the dye particles enter the marginal zone and the splenic sinuses. In addition, from the white pulp arteries arise 2 types of anastomotic arterioles which appear enlarged after succinonitrile treatment: The short anastomotic arterioles that crosses the marginal zone entering the red pulp near the white pulp; the long anastomotic arterioles which enter the red pulp and after a long course end up into or around a collector sinus. The addition of histamine dihydrochloride to the perfusion solutions shows a slight vasodilator effect mainly on the subcapsular penicillar arterioles, including the helicine arterioles. The adrenergic stimulation of the splenic blood vessels induces a generalized arterial constriction, except of the anastomotic arterioles, that becomes open; in such way, the blood pathway follows the course of the anastomotic arterioles and the collector arterioles also become constricted. The adrenergic vasoconstrictor effect is inhibited by the phenoxy-benzamine hydrochloride. The addition of acetylcholine chloride, in the dosage, used, induces a generalized arterial vessel constriction, mainly of the perifollicular plexus. This effect is inhibited by atropine sulfate which, on the other hand, produces evident enlargement of the perifollicular and pericolumnar arterial plexus.
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Ann Plast Surg
January 2025
From the Plastic Surgery Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China.
Background: Choke anastomosis is commonly recognized as a resistance factor that detrimentally affects the hemodynamics of the skin flap; however, its additional potential physiological roles in normal skin function are currently not fully understood.
Methods: Ten cadaveric forehead flap specimens pedicled with unilateral STAs were perfused with lead oxide-gelatin mixture, and then dissected into 3 layers, including the super temporal fascia-frontalis-galea aponeurotica layer, the subcutaneous adipose tissue layer, and the "super-thin flap" layer. The forehead flap and stratified specimens underwent molybdenum target x-ray and subsequent transparent processing to effectively visualize the microscopic spatial architecture of arterial vessels across all levels.
Front Cardiovasc Med
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Department of Biomedical Engineering, California Medical Innovations Institute, San Diego, CA, United States.
Transpl Int
May 2022
Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Yokohama City University, Yokohama, Japan.
A duct-to-duct-biliary-anastomosis is the preferred biliary reconstruction technique in liver transplantation; biliary complications remain the major concerns for the technique. We examined the significance of the intramural vascular network of the extrahepatic bile duct (EBD) and its relevant vessels. We microscopically examined the axial sections of the EBD with 5 mm intervals of 10 formalin-fixed deceased livers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Dev Biol
July 2021
Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy.
The choroid plexus (CP) acts as a regulated gate between blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Despite its simple histology (a monostratified cuboidal epithelium overlying a vascularized stroma), this organ has remarkably complex functions several of which involve local interaction with cells located around ventricle walls. Our knowledge of CP structural organization is mainly derived from resin casts, which capture the overall features but only allow reconstruction of the vascular pattern surface, unrelated to the overlying epithelium and only loosely related to ventricular location.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
June 2021
Center for Developmental Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, WA 98101;
Capillary networks are essential for distribution of blood flow through the brain, and numerous other homeostatic functions, including neurovascular signal conduction and blood-brain barrier integrity. Accordingly, the impairment of capillary architecture and function lies at the root of many brain diseases. Visualizing how brain capillary networks develop in vivo can reveal innate programs for cerebrovascular growth and repair.
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