Does endothelium removal prevent reductions in arterial diameter produced by chronic decreases in blood flow in rabbits?
The endothelium is essential for the compensatory structural reduction in arterial diameter in response to chronic decreases in blood flow.
A 70 percent reduction in the rate of blood flow through the common carotid artery in rabbits caused a 21 percent decrease in the diameter of this artery within 2 weeks. The smooth muscle relaxant papaverine did not attenuate the response; therefore, such reductions in diameter probably reflect a structural modification of the arterial wall rather than sustained contraction of smooth muscle. This arterial response to reduced blood flow was abolished when the endothelium was removed from the vessels. It appears that the endothelium is essential for the compensatory arterial response to long-term changes in luminal blood flow rates.
Langille et al. (Fri,) studied this question.