scholarly journals The Vascular System of the Lung, Especially on the Distance to Certain Parts of the Pulmonary Blood Vessels from the Inner Surface of the Ribs along the Lines of the Axis of the Body

1953 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 847-860
Author(s):  
Masaharu Hara

It is customary for Croonian lecturers, after expressing their thanks to the President and Council for the honour that they have received in being asked to give this lecture, to devote some time to a justification of their subject in terms of Mrs Croone’s suggestion that the lecture should deal with the advancement of natural knowledge on local motion. The first of these tasks, Mr President, I perform humbly and with deep gratitude, but at the same time with some surprise that Council in its wisdom should have chosen one so ill-fitted for the honour you have laid upon him. The second task is easier since my lecture will deal with the nerves which control the muscles surrounding the hollow organs of the body, blood vessels and bowels, and further justification as a theme dealing with local motion the most captious critic could not desire. Three years ago my former colleague Bernard Katz gave the Croonian Lecture on ‘ Transmission of impulses from nerve to muscle’ in which he described our present knowledge of the mechanism of the chemical mediation interposed between nerve and skeletal muscle and summarized his own brilliant contributions to this, to me, fascinating subject. Today I am dealing again with transmission from nerve to muscle, but in a different system and, I am afraid, at a quite different and lower intellectual level than that of Katz. The idea of chemical transmission from nerve to effector cell came first to T. R. Elliott in 1904 as a result of his observation, in an extensive comparative study, of the close similarities between the actions of adrenaline injected intravenously and the effects of stimulating nerves belonging to the sympathetic system. These nerves we should now call in Dale’s (1933) terminology the adrenergic nerves, those transmitting their effects whether excitatory or inhibitory by the liberation at their endings of a ‘minute charge’ of the catecholamine adrenaline or one of its analogues. The cells upon which these nerves exert their action are the smooth muscle cells controlling the movements of the hollow viscera, intestines, reproductive tract and so on, and of the muscle cells of the vascular system that regulate the diameter of the blood vessels. These are processes that do not demand high precision of timing nor do they apparently require the instant turning on and off of transmitter action with which we have grown familiar in the junction between nerve and skeletal muscle. At this junction, as Katz showed, liberation and action of acetylcholine and its inactivation by the specific enzyme cholinesterase are over in a few milliseconds, and there is no reason to believe that the liberated transmitter in the untreated junction can ever diffuse more than a few microus from its site of action. It is hemmed in by barriers of specific cholinesterase, and these are reinforced by barriers of the non-specific enzyme in blood and tissue fluids. This narrow coarctation of the transmitter acetylcholine in space and time seems, however, to be confined to places where precise timing is required, such as at the neuromuscular junction and in the ganglionic and central nervous synapse. When it is liberated as the transmitter from nerves to blood vessels, or to secretory glands, it can escape some way from its site of liberation and persist long enough to be detected by skeletal muscles sensitized by denervation, as is seen in the Sherrington, Rogowitz and Vulpian-Heidenhain phenomena. I have laboured a little this question of diffusion and action at a distance of transmitter because it constitutes prima facie one of the most striking differences between the adrenergic and the cholinergic transmitters in at least the mammalian body. It was indeed because the liberated adrenergic transmitter escaped into the blood stream and could be detected by another tissue or organ, sometimes, but not necessarily, specially sensitized, that W. B. Cannon and his colleagues in the 30’s were able to add so much to our knowledge of sympathetic innervation. Nevertheless, in spite of the relative stability of the adrenergic transmitter and its ready detection in the blood stream, little had been discovered about the quantitative aspects of its liberation and metabolism some 50 years after its existence had been postulated, whereas we now have, and have had for 30 years, quite reasonably complete information about the liberation, storage and metabolism of the unstable and ephemeral acetylcholine.


This memoir contains a detailed description, with illustrations, of the intracranial blood-vessels of the Tuatara, of which no account has hitherto been published. The description is belived to be more complete than any hithero given for any reptile, and a considerable number of vessels are described which have not hithero been noted in Lacertilia. This comparative completeness of detail is largely due to the employment of a special method of investigation. By this method the entire contents of the cranial cavity are fixed and hardened in situ , and are then in excellent condition either for dissection or for histological purposes. The brain does not occupy nearly the whole of the cranial cavity, there being a very large subdural space (especially above the brain), across which many of the blood-vessels run, together with delicate strands of connective tissue which connect the dura mater with pia. The eyeballs are removed and an incision is made on each side in the cartilaginous wall which separates the cranial cavity from the orbit. Acetic bichromate of potash (made up according to the formula given by Bolles Lee) is injected in to the cranial cavity through these incision, and the entire animal, after opening the body cavity, is suspended in a large volume of the same fluid for about five days, and then graded up to 70 per cent. Alcohol. When the cranial cavity is now opened up the cerebral vessels are seen with extraordinary distinctness, although they have not been artifically injected. Futher details were made out by means of serial sections, both transverse and longitudinal, and both of the adult and of advanced embroyes (Stage S). In most respect the arrangement of the intracranical blood-vessels agrees with found in the Lacertilia, so far as these have been investigated, but there is an important difference in the fact that the posterior cephalic vein leaves the cranial cavity through the foramen jugulare and not through the foramen magnum, while a slightly more primitive condition is shown in the less complete union of the right and left halves of the basilar artery. Sphenodon makes some approach to the condition of the Chelonia in this latter respect, but differs conspicuously from this group in the fact that the circle of Willis is not completed anteriorly, as well as in the fact that no branch of the posterior cephalic vein leaves the cranial cavity through the foreman magnum. A very characteristic features of Sphenodon is the development of large transverse sinues resembling those of the crocodile, but these communicate with the extracranial vascular system in quite a different manner from that described by Rathke in the latter animal.


2014 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 279-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivien Shaw

The objectives of this research are, first, to establish if the extraordinary acupuncture meridian known as Chōng $$ Penetrating Vessel or Sea of Blood, is in essence a description of certain macroscopic parts of the underlying vascular system and, second, by extension, to show that it is likely that cadaveric dissection would have been used as a tool to arrive at this understanding. Generally accepted scholarly opinion holds that the ancient Chinese rarely used dissection in order to explore the anatomy of the human body, and that the meridians are therefore invisible metaphysical structures corresponding to lines drawn on the body. However, the seminal text, ‘The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine’, describes using palpation to examine the living and dissection to examine the dead. This implies that the original authors of these texts were observing physical structures visible to the naked eye. Dissection has therefore been used to compare the descriptions of the Chōng meridian in ‘The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine’ with the vascular anatomy of the human body. Fifteen acupuncture points located on various different ordinary meridians but bearing the same name, Chōng $$ were also examined to see if they bore any relationship to the vascular system. The dissections clearly show that the Chōng meridian correlates to certain main blood vessels in the body, in particular the vena cava. Similarly, most Chōng acupuncture points have a strong correspondence with blood vessels, marking terminal arteries on the hands, feet and forehead and anastomoses on the face, body and feet. These findings strongly suggest that the ancient Chinese texts relating to this meridian are likely to have been a ‘description’ of the vascular system. Furthermore, the ancient Chinese apparently had a high degree of anatomical skill in the practice of dissection and acute powers of observation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
DR.MATHEW GEORGE ◽  
DR.LINCY JOSEPH ◽  
MRS.DEEPTHI MATHEW ◽  
ALISHA MARIA SHAJI ◽  
BIJI JOSEPH ◽  
...  

Blood pressure is the force of blood pushing against blood vessel walls as the heart pumps out blood, and high blood pressure, also called hypertension, is an increase in the amount of force that blood places on blood vessels as it moves through the body. Factors that can increase this force include higher blood volume due to extra fluid in the blood and blood vessels that are narrow, stiff, or clogged(1). High blood pressure can damage blood vessels in the kidneys, reducing their ability to work properly. When the force of blood flow is high, blood vessels stretch so blood flows more easily. Eventually, this stretching scars and weakens blood vessels throughout the body, including those in the kidneys.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 210-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.T. Akhmetov ◽  
A.A. Valiev ◽  
A.A. Rakhimov ◽  
S.P. Sametov ◽  
R.R. Habibullina

It is mentioned in the paper that hydrodynamic conditions of a flow in blood vessels with the stenosis are abnormal in relation to the total hemodynamic conditions of blood flow in a vascular system of a human body. A microfluidic device developed with a stepped narrowing for studying of the blood flow at abnormal conditions allowed to reveal blood structure in microchannels simulating the stenosis. Microstructure change is observed during the flow of both native and diluted blood through the narrowing. The study of hemorheological properties allowed us to determine an increasing contribution of the hydraulic resistance of the healthy part of the vessel during the stenosis formation.


Impact ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (3) ◽  
pp. 26-28
Author(s):  
Jonathan Dawson ◽  
Richard Oreffo

Gels made from clay could provide an environment able to stimulate stem-cells due to their ability to bind biological molecules. That molecules stick to clay has been known by scientists since the 1960s. Doctors observed that absorption into the blood stream of certain drugs was severely reduced when patients were also receiving clay-based antacid or anti-diarrhoeal treatments. This curious phenomenon was realized to be due to binding of the drugs by clay particles. This interaction is now routinely harnessed in the design of tablets to carefully control the release and action of a drug. Dr Dawson now proposes to use this property of clay to create micro-environments that could stimulate stem cells to regenerate damaged tissues such as bone, cartilage or skin. The rich electrostatic properties of nano (1 millionth of a millimetre) -scale clay particles which mediate these interactions could allow two hurdles facing the development of stem-cell based regenerative therapies to be overcome simultaneously. The first challenge - to deliver and hold stem cells at the right location in the body - is met by the ability of clays to self-organise into gels via the electrostatic interactions of the particles with each other. Cells mixed with a low concentration (less than 4%) of clay particles can be injected into the body and held in the right place by the gel, eliminating, in many situations, the need for surgery. Clay particles can also interact with large structural molecules (polymers) which are frequently used in the development of materials (or 'scaffolds'), designed to host stem cells. These interactions can greatly improve the strength of such structures and could be applied to preserve their stability at the site of injury until regeneration is complete. While several gels and scaffold materials have been designed to deliver and hold stem cells at the site of regeneration, the ability of clay nanoparticles to overcome a second critical hurdle facing stem-cell therapy is what makes them especially exciting. Essential to directing the activity of stem-cells is the carefully controlled provision of key biological signalling molecules. However, the open structures of conventional scaffolds or gels, while essential for the diffusion of nutrients to the cells, means their ability to hold the signalling molecules in the same location as the cells is limited. The ability of clay nano-particles to bind biological molecules presents a unique opportunity to create local environments at a site of injury or disease that can stimulate and control stem-cell driven repair. Dr Dawson's early studies investigated the ability of clay gels to stimulate the growth of new blood vessels by incorporating a key molecular signal that stimulates this process, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). In a manner reminiscent of the observations made in the 60s, Dr Dawson and colleagues observed that adding a drop of clay gel to a solution containing VEGF caused, after a few hours, the disappearance of VEGF from the solution as it became bound to the gel. When placed in an experimental injury model, the gel-bound VEGF stimulated a cluster of new blood vessels to form. These exciting results indicate the potential of clay nanoparticles to create tailor-made micro-environments to foster stem cell regeneration. Dr Dawson is developing this approach as a means of first exploring the biological signals necessary to successfully control stem cell behaviour for regeneration and then, using the same approach, to provide stem cells with these signals to stimulate regeneration in the body. The project will seek to test this approach to regenerate bone lost to cancer or hip replacement failure. If successful the same technology may be applied to harness stem cells for the treatment of a whole host of different scenarios, from burn victims to those suffering with diabetes or Parkinson's.


1905 ◽  
Vol s2-49 (193) ◽  
pp. 1-38
Author(s):  
RICHARD ASSHETON ◽  
THOMAS G. STEVENS

1. The full-term after-birth of the elephant consists of a chorion from which spring many much-branched villi, which spread out in all directions into plate-like branches. These end in (a) proximal foliaceous terminations, in which the fœtal blood vessels ramify, which interlace with a complicated system of much larger blood channels filled with maternal blood, having well-defined but non-nucleated walls; (b) more distal lobate terminations, which are covered by a wellmarked columnar or cubical epithelium -- presumably the trophoblast -- which are partly embedded in a kind of coagulum or detritus, and partly appear to hang loosely in irregular blood spaces without walls ; (c) the stems of still more prolonged villi, which have been torn off and probably left embedded in the walls of the uterus; (d) a few torn ends of blood-vessels. 2. The main trunks of the villi and their foliaceous terminations are everywhere separated from the maternal bloodchannels by a syncytial layer, which is continuous with the epithelium covering the lobate terminations, and is presumably trophoblastic. 3. The half-term placenta originally examined by Owen in 1850 shows, in its more central region, characters which are essentially similar to those of the full-term specimen, and goes far to prove the existence of longer villi which penetrate deeply into the uterine mucosa. The lateral areas of the zonary belt exhibit many most interesting previous conditions. We are able to see in these the simple terminations of the foetal villi covered with a single layer of trophoblast separated from the uterine tissues by a layer of matei'ial partly maternal and partly of foetal origin. There is no process of growth round existing maternal capillaries to form an angio-plasmode, nor apparently any phagocytic action on the part of the trophoblast. The vascularisation of the after-birth is effected by the invasion of the trophoblast by extravasated maternal blood, which flows at first in intercellular and intervillous passages which form the larger channels of the after-birth maternal vascular system, and then makes its way along intra-cellular or intrasyncytial canals through a plasmodium produced by the breaking down of the trophoblast of two adjoining villi. We think the evidence is in favour of considering the corpuscles floating in this invading stream, which contains no red non-nucleated corpuscles in its more advanced portions, to be of maternal rather than trophoblastic origin. 4. The tissues of the full-term placenta contain pigment granules, which are deposited chiefly in the syncytial layer. This we regard as an excretory product; it is almost quite absent from the tissues of the half-term specimen. Leucocytes, either of maternal or foetal origin, seem to be concerned in the transference of this pigment into the maternal blood stream. 5. The subcircular bodies of Owen we find as described by him and Turner, though we note the presence of minute villi on their outer surface. 6. We confirm the opinion of previous writers that the zonary band in part is a "deciduous" form of placenta, although there is not much maternal tissue except the blood. It is not correct to speak of the after-birth being composed of a "much hypertrophied mncosa layer of the uterus." 7. The placenta of the elephant shows by its long villi, which tend to remain embedded in the uterus wall, a resemblance to the condition found in the Sirenia; by the villous patches at the poles and other villi which come out from the uterus, either with or without their trophoblastic covering, but with no maternal cells attached, a resemblance to the ungulata vera of the Perissodactyl type ; by the invasion of the trophoblast--if such it is--by the maternal blood stream, a resemblance to the Discoplacental type, although the actual manner by which this invasion occnrs would seem to be--so far as our very limited material affords us opportunity of observation--unlike anything hitherto described.1 8. The resemblance, at first sight obvious enough to the zonary placenta of the carnivora, is superficial. The elephant's placenta differs from that of the carnivora in (a) consisting of three areas of attachment instead of one, two of which, are wholly in the non-deciduous type, the other partly deciduous, partly non-deciduous. (b) There is nothing formed comparable to an angio-plasmode. (c) The maternal capillaries do not directly become the maternal vessels of the after-birth.


Author(s):  
Елизавета Александровна Молчанова ◽  
Петр Вячеславович Лужнов

В работе приведены понятия жесткости, эластичности и тонуса сосудов, а также же их взаимосвязь с общим состоянием сосудистой стенки. Описан индекс, объединяющий влияние вышеперечисленных факторов на состояние сосудистой системы и дающий представление о возрасте сосудов пациента, а также показана связь этого индекса с возрастом человека. Представлен обзор способов определения возраста сосудов с помощью контурного анализа пульсовой волны. Среди предложенных способов был выделен подход на основе контурного анализа сигнала пульсовой волны, а также ее второй производной. В данном исследовании проводилась разработка алгоритма расчета показателя возраста сосудов (VA), базирующаяся на анализе сигнала и его второй производной. При этом особое внимание уделялось физической интерпретации параметров, входящих в состав расчетной формулы. С помощью представленного алгоритма в группе из трех испытуемых был определен сосудистый возраст. Из анализа полученных результатов было выявлено влияние физиологических факторов на значение возраста сосудов. Предложены методики, позволяющие исключить влияние этих факторов на значения показателя VA и тем самым получить более точные результаты. Также представлены стратегии дальнейшего развития исследований в этом направлении In The paper presents the concepts of rigidity, elasticity and tone of blood vessels, as well as their relationship with the general state of the vascular wall. An index is described that combines the influence of the above factors on the state of the vascular system and gives an idea of the age of the patient's vessels, and also shows the relationship of this index with the age of a person. An overview of the methods for determining the age of blood vessels using the contour analysis of the pulse wave is presented. Among the proposed methods, an approach based on the contour analysis of the pulse wave signal, as well as its second derivative, was singled out. In this study, an algorithm was developed for calculating the indicator of vascular age (VA), based on the analysis of the signal and its second derivative. In this case, special attention was paid to the physical interpretation of the parameters included in the calculation formula. Using the presented algorithm, vascular age was determined in a group of three subjects. From the analysis of the results obtained, the influence of physiological factors on the value of the age of the vessels was revealed. Methods are proposed that allow to exclude the influence of these factors on the values of the VA indicator and thereby obtain more accurate results. Also presented are strategies for the further development of research in this direction


2000 ◽  
Vol 203 (11) ◽  
pp. 1659-1669 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Schwerte ◽  
B. Pelster

The analysis of perfusion parameters using the frame-to-frame technique and the observation of small blood vessels in transparent animals using video microscopy can be tedious and very difficult because of the poor contrast of the images. Injection of a fluorescent probe (fluorescein isothiocynate, FITC) bound to a high-molecular-mass dextran improved the visibility of blood vessels, but the gray-scale histogram showed blurring at the edges of the vessels. Furthermore, injection of the fluorescent probe into the ventricle of small zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos (body mass approximately 1 mg) often resulted in reduced cardiac activity. Digital motion analysis, however, proved to be a very effective tool for analysing the shape and performance of the circulatory system in transparent animals and tissues. By subtracting the two fields of a video frame (the odd and the even frame), any movement that occurred within the 20 ms necessary for the acquisition of one field could be visualised. The length of the shifting vector generated by this subtraction, represented a direct measure of the velocity of a moving particle, i.e. an erythrocyte in the vascular system. By accumulating shifting vectors generated from several consecutive video frames, a complete trace of the routes over which erythrocytes moved could be obtained. Thus, a cast of the vascular system, except for those tiny vessels that are not entered by erythrocytes, could be obtained. Because the gray-scale value of any given pixel or any given group of pixels increased with the number of erythrocytes passing it, digital motion analysis could also be used to visualise the distribution of blood cells in transparent tissues. This method was used to describe the development of the peripheral vascular system in zebrafish larvae up to 8 days post-fertilisation. At this stage, food intake resulted in a clear redistribution of blood between muscle tissue and the gut, and alpha-adrenergic control of peripheral blood flow was established.


1990 ◽  
Vol 259 (3) ◽  
pp. R393-R404 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. H. Adair ◽  
W. J. Gay ◽  
J. P. Montani

Prolonged imbalances between the perfusion capabilities of the blood vessels and the metabolic requirements of the tissue cells often lead to modification of the vasculature to satisfy the tissue needs. This homeostatic response appears to be bidirectional, since the vascularity of a tissue can increase or decrease in parallel with primary changes in metabolic rate. The factors that mediate the responses are not well understood, but oxygen has been implicated as a major control element, since vessel growth increases during hypoxic conditions and decreases during hyperoxic conditions. The following feedback control hypothesis may apply to many different physiological situations. Decreased oxygenation causes the tissues to become hypoxic, and this initiates a variety of signals that lead to the growth of blood vessels. The increase in vascularity promotes oxygen delivery to the tissue cells by decreasing diffusion distances, increasing capillary surface area, and increasing the maximum rate of blood flow. When the tissues receive adequate amounts of oxygen even during periods of peak activity, the intermediate effectors return to normal levels, and this negative signal, in turn, stops the further development of the vasculature. Although the effector mechanisms of the hypoxic stimulus are still being investigated, adenosine, which is produced in hypoxic tissues, appears to mediate hypoxia-induced increases in vascularity in some instances. Roles for fibroblast growth factor as well as mechanical factors associated with vasodilation and increased blood flow are postulated. Although blood vessel growth is a multifactorial process, a major influence in its regulation appears to be metabolic need. If this view is correct, it may be found that many of the quantitatively significant factors that control growth in a given vasculature are themselves modulated or controlled by metabolic signals reflecting the nutritional status of the tissues which that vasculature supplies.


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