Circulation, Vol 86, 1249-1256, Copyright © 1992 by American Heart Association
PC Douek, R Correa, R Neville, EF Unger, M Shou, S Banai, VJ Ferrans, SE Epstein, MB Leon and RF Bonner
BACKGROUND. Recently, laser-heated and radio frequency-heated balloon
angioplasty techniques have been proposed as a means to treat or minimize
dissection and elastic recoil but have been associated with a high rate of
clinical restenosis. Similarly, pulsed laser angioplasty techniques
proposed to minimize thermal injury while ablating obstructing atheroma
have failed to reduce clinical restenosis. Because "hot balloon" and pulsed
laser angioplasty create both mechanical and thermal injury, it has been
difficult to discern the cause of the smooth muscle cell (SMC)
proliferation resulting in restenosis and whether such magnitude of
proliferation is predictable and dose related. This study was undertaken to
explore these issues. METHODS AND RESULTS. Localized thermal lesions
accompanying efficient ablation were created with a pulsed Tm:YAG laser in
nine rabbit aortas, which consistently led to a focal proliferation of SMC
that filled the ablated region by 4 weeks. Transcutaneous Ho:YAG pulsed
laser irradiation at multiple independent sites of 24 central rabbit ear
arteries without ablation led to brief approximately 30 degrees C thermal
transients and thermal damage to the artery wall resulting in significant
neointimal proliferation by 3 weeks and a mean cross- sectional narrowing
of 59 +/- 17% at a dose of 390 mJ/mm2. Acute and chronic responses to
varying total energy deposition were studied by histology after the rabbits
were killed at 2 hours to 4 weeks. Arterial segments midway between laser
injuries were unaffected and served as internal controls. Neointimal
proliferation at 3 weeks after laser injury exhibited a clear dose
dependence. Mean cross-sectional narrowing increased from 34 +/- 10% to 85
+/- 15% as laser fluence increased from 240 mJ/cm2 to 640 mJ/cm2 (r =
0.84). Similarly, cross- sectional narrowing caused by SMC neointimal
proliferation increased from 20 +/- 10% to 77 +/- 17% for a fixed surface
irradiation as the depth of the most superficial arterial media decreased
from 600 microns to 330 microns (r = 0.94). CONCLUSIONS. Thermal injury to
the arterial wall is a potent stimulus for SMC proliferation and may
necessitate reduction in laser or thermal energy used for angioplasty.
Moreover, a dose-response relation exists between the degree of thermal
injury and SMC proliferative response. Hence, this technique could be used
as a practical model of restenosis suitable for screening therapies for
inhibition of SMC proliferation.
ARTICLES
Dose-dependent smooth muscle cell proliferation induced by thermal injury with pulsed infrared lasers
National Center for Research Resources, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. 20892.
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