March 27, 2018

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Humans risked limb ischemia in exchange for bipedal walking

Micro X-ray CT scans reveal the reason why mice do not suffer as much tissue damage under ischemic conditions as humans. Their inferior gluteal artery provides a more effective bridge around blood clots in the femoral artery. Credit: Dr. Yuichiro Arima
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Micro X-ray CT scans reveal the reason why mice do not suffer as much tissue damage under ischemic conditions as humans. Their inferior gluteal artery provides a more effective bridge around blood clots in the femoral artery. Credit: Dr. Yuichiro Arima

Peripheral obstructive arterial disease develops when blood vessels narrow due to arteriosclerosis and blood flow in the legs (or sometimes the arms) becomes clogged. Intermittent claudication is when blood flow disturbances in a limb causes pain, numbness, or coldness during physical activity. In severe cases, where the tissue has gone without blood for too long and dies, the limb may have to be amputated.

Previous clinical and animal research showed that mice receive less tissue damage under ischemic condition than humans, but the cause of the difference was not clear. To illustrate why humans seem to have such a disadvantage, researchers from Kumamoto University, Japan, focused on collateral vessels that could bypass an obstruction. Using a murine hind limb ischemia model, they compared the shape of mouse hind limb with those of a patient who had peripheral obstructive artery disease.

There are techniques, such as radiography, that can be used to visualize the small blood vessels of a mouse but they can only produce two-dimensional images. To obtain more detail, the researchers elected to use a system built by a collaboration of engineering and medical science researchers that established a method for stereoscopic visualization of small structures, the micro X-ray CT. This allowed for the detailed visualization of mouse vessels through soft tissue and around bone.

The micro CT scans clarified that when the hind limb of a mouse suffers from ischemia, the inferior gluteal artery expands and functions as a bypass. Even in human patients with peripheral obstructive artery disease, detailed diagnostic images revealed that the inferior gluteal artery expands in response to vascular stenosis ( hardening).

Pathways of the underlying arteries in mice and humans, and changes in femoral artery occlusion (right). When the femoral artery becomes occluded in the mouse, the inferior gluteal artery provides a path around it to the lower leg. In humans, the inferior gluteal artery stops at the buttocks and cannot send blood to the lower leg where it is needed during an occlusion. Credit: Dr. Yuichiro Arima
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Pathways of the underlying arteries in mice and humans, and changes in femoral artery occlusion (right). When the femoral artery becomes occluded in the mouse, the inferior gluteal artery provides a path around it to the lower leg. In humans, the inferior gluteal artery stops at the buttocks and cannot send blood to the lower leg where it is needed during an occlusion. Credit: Dr. Yuichiro Arima

Importantly, the researchers also showed that the inferior gluteal artery of the mouse extends to the lower hind leg area, whereas the human inferior gluteal artery terminates much earlier at the buttock. Consequently, the vascular structure is more robust against lower limb ischemia than the human vascular structure.

"Two things are believed to be the causes of the inhibited development of the inferior gluteal artery in humans," said Assistant Professor Yuichiro Arima, who led the study. "One is that the development of the artery is restricted by the skeletal change accompanying bipedal walking, and the other is that, over time, the distance between the pelvis and the lower leg has become too far for the artery to reach. In other words, evolution has increased the human risk for lower ischemia. This understanding is expected to lead to the development of treatments that strengthen the collateral circulation pathways for people suffering from peripheral obstructive arterial disease."

Video of mouse hind limbs one month after induction of ischemia via ligation in the left hind limb. Compared to the right hind limb, a plurality of blood vessels, called collateral arteries, are visible in the left limb and function as a bypass around the ligation. Credit: Dr. Yuichiro Arima

This research result was posted online in the Journal of American Heart Association on 23 March 2018.

More information: Yuichiro Arima et al, Evaluation of Collateral Source Characteristics With 3‐Dimensional Analysis Using Micro–X‐Ray Computed Tomography, Journal of the American Heart Association (2018). DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.117.007800

Journal information: Journal of the American Heart Association

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