Microcapsules, prepared with alginate and polylysine, were injected intraperitoneally into mice and the number of peritoneal leucocytes as well as the cells sticking to the capsule wall were counted after 4-28 days. A significant increase in host reaction was observed when the microcapsules contained an outer layer of polylysine as compared with calcium alginate beads without polylysine or microcapsules coated with an outer layer of alginate. The alginate sources influenced the host reaction significantly. After an intraperitoneal residence of 4 days, the microcapsules were mainly surrounded by macrophages. After 28 days, several cell layers surrounded the microcapsules; macrophages, multinucleate giant cells, fibroblasts and mesothelial cells.
The close spatial relation among foam cell accumulation, pronounced intimal SMC loss, and cell death suggests the presence of a foam cell-derived factor that can induce cell death in the SMC population of the intimal thickening. The depletion of the intimal SMC population could promote plaque rupture and thrombotic complications in the grafts.
Occlusion of saphenous vein grafts is a major problem after coronary artery bypass grafting. Segments of occluded and suboccluded implanted aortocoronary grafts were obtained during re-intervention bypass grafting in 47 patients yielding a total of 80 vein grafts. The grafts were studied by immunohistochemistry for smooth muscle cells (alpha-SMC actin), macrophages (HAM56), cell replication (PCNA, Ki-67) and transmission and scanning electronmicroscopy (TEM, SEM). In 81% of the examined grafts the (sub)occlusion was due to a myo-intimal thickening and an associated luminal accumulation of foam cells and mural thrombi. The foam cells were constantly found at the luminal site of the myo-intimal thickening and within the luminal part of adherent thrombi. Transmission electronmicroscopy demonstrated phagocytosis of platelets and platelet fragments by the foam cells. A significant fraction of the foam cells demonstrated nuclear immunoreactivity for Ki-67 and PCNA. The myo-intimal thickening of the vein grafts was composed of smooth muscle cells lying in a fibrous tissue matrix. The smooth muscle cells were surrounded by prominent basal lamina and showed ultrastructural features of apoptosis. Our results support the hypothesis that phagocytosis of lipid rich platelets by monocytes set up a mechanism for foam cell formation and replication in human saphenous vein grafts. The transformation of a smooth muscle cell rich myointimal thickening towards a fibrous, cell poor intimal thickening could be induced by progressive smooth muscle cell loss through apoptosis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.