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      Wall shear stress as measured in vivo: consequences for the design of the arterial system

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          Abstract

          Based upon theory, wall shear stress (WSS), an important determinant of endothelial function and gene expression, has been assumed to be constant along the arterial tree and the same in a particular artery across species. In vivo measurements of WSS, however, have shown that these assumptions are far from valid. In this survey we will discuss the assessment of WSS in the arterial system in vivo and present the results obtained in large arteries and arterioles. In vivo WSS can be estimated from wall shear rate, as derived from non-invasively recorded velocity profiles, and whole blood viscosity in large arteries and plasma viscosity in arterioles, avoiding theoretical assumptions. In large arteries velocity profiles can be recorded by means of a specially designed ultrasound system and in arterioles via optical techniques using fluorescent flow velocity tracers. It is shown that in humans mean WSS is substantially higher in the carotid artery (1.1–1.3 Pa) than in the brachial (0.4–0.5 Pa) and femoral (0.3–0.5 Pa) arteries. Also in animals mean WSS varies substantially along the arterial tree. Mean WSS in arterioles varies between about 1.0 and 5.0 Pa in the various studies and is dependent on the site of measurement in these vessels. Across species mean WSS in a particular artery decreases linearly with body mass, e.g., in the infra-renal aorta from 8.8 Pa in mice to 0.5 Pa in humans. The observation that mean WSS is far from constant along the arterial tree implies that Murray’s cube law on flow-diameter relations cannot be applied to the whole arterial system. Because blood flow velocity is not constant along the arterial tree either, a square law also does not hold. The exponent in the power law likely varies along the arterial system, probably from 2 in large arteries near the heart to 3 in arterioles. The in vivo findings also imply that in in vitro studies no average shear stress value can be taken to study effects on endothelial cells derived from different vascular areas or from the same artery in different species. The cells have to be studied under the shear stress conditions they are exposed to in real life.

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          Most cited references64

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          The Physiological Principle of Minimum Work: I. The Vascular System and the Cost of Blood Volume.

          C. Murray (1926)
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            On connecting large vessels to small. The meaning of Murray's law

            TF Sherman (1981)
            A large part of the branching vasculature of the mammalian circulatory and respiratory systems obeys Murray's law, which states that the cube of the radius of a parent vessel equals the sum of the cubes of the radii of the daughters. Where this law is obeyed, a functional relationship exists between vessel radius and volumetric flow, average linear velocity of flow, velocity profile, vessel-wall shear stress, Reynolds number, and pressure gradient in individual vessels. In homogeneous, full-flow sets of vessels, a relation is also established between vessel radius and the conductance, resistance, and cross- sectional area of a full-flow set.
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              Role of endothelium in responses of vascular smooth muscle.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Reneman@fys.unimaas.nl
                Journal
                Med Biol Eng Comput
                Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0140-0118
                1741-0444
                7 March 2008
                May 2008
                : 46
                : 5
                : 499-507
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Physiology, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, University of Maastricht, POB 616, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands
                [2 ]Department of Biophysics, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht, University of Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands
                Article
                330
                10.1007/s11517-008-0330-2
                2441533
                18324431
                5d5afb48-b42a-448b-807f-df6e514d3a2b
                © International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering 2008
                History
                : 30 July 2007
                : 22 February 2008
                Categories
                Special Issue
                Custom metadata
                © International Federation for Medical and Biological Engineering 2008

                Biomedical engineering
                design arterial system,wall shear stress,velocity tracers,murray’s law,in vivo blood flow assessment,exponential power law,ultrasound

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