1. Description, Staging and Quantification of Pulmonary Artery Angiophagy in a Large Animal Model of Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension
- Author
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Perros, Frédéric, Ghigna, Maria-Rosa, Loisel, Fanny, Chemla, Denis, Decante, Benoit, de Montpreville, Vincent, Montani, David, Humbert, Marc, Fadel, Elie, Mercier, Olaf, and Boulate, David
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pulmonary embolism ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,pulmonary artery ,animal model ,pulmonary hypertension ,angiophagy ,pathology ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Article ,remodeling - Abstract
Angiophagy has been described as a non-fibrinolytic mechanism of pulmonary artery (PA) patency restoration after distal (<, 50 µ, m in diameter) pulmonary embolism in mice. We hypothesized that angiophagy could achieve muscularized PA patency restoration after pulmonary embolism in piglets and humans. Angiophagy was defined by pathological assessment as the moving of an embolic specimen from the lumen to the interstitium according to three stages in a pig model of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) 6 to 10 weeks after embolization with enbucrilate: the embolic specimen is (I) covered by endothelial cells, (II) covered by endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells, and (III) located in the adventitia. In animals, we observed the three stages of the pulmonary angiophagy of enbucrilate emboli in <, 300 µ, m PA. Stages II and III were observed in 300 to 1000 &mu, m PA, and only Stage I was observed in larger-diameter PA (>, 1000 &mu, m). In lung samples from patients with histories of pulmonary embolisms, we observed PA angiophagy stigma for embolic specimens derived from blood clots and from bone marrow emboli. This study provides an original pathological description and staging of PA angiophagy in a large animal model of CTEPH and in humans after pulmonary embolism.
- Published
- 2020
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