Augmentation of Wall Shear Stress Inhibits Neointimal Hyperplasia After Stent Implantation

Author:

Carlier Stéphane G.1,van Damme Luc C.A.1,Blommerde Casper P.1,Wentzel Jolanda J.1,van Langehove Glenn1,Verheye Stephan1,Kockx Mark M.1,Knaapen Michiel W.M.1,Cheng Caroline1,Gijsen Frank1,Duncker Dirk J.1,Stergiopulos Nikos1,Slager Cornelis J.1,Serruys Patrick W.1,Krams Rob1

Affiliation:

1. From the Thoraxcentre, Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam (S.G.C., L.C.A.v.D., C.P.B., F.G., D.J.D., C.J.S., P.W.S., R.K.) and Interuniversity Institute of Cardiology of the Netherlands (J.J.W., C.C.), Utrecht, Netherlands; Middelheim Hospital (G.v.L., S.V., M.M.K.) and HistogeneX (M.W.M.K.), Antwerp, Belgium; and Ecole Polytechnique, Lausanne, Switzerland (N.S.).

Abstract

Background— Low wall shear stress (WSS) increases neointimal hyperplasia (NH) in vein grafts and stents. We studied the causal relationship between WSS and NH formation in stents by locally increasing WSS with a flow divider (Anti-Restenotic Diffuser, Endoart SA) placed in the center of the stent. Methods and Results— In 9 rabbits fed a high-cholesterol diet for 2 months to induce endothelial dysfunction, 18 stents were implanted in the right and left external iliac arteries (1 stent per vessel). Lumen diameters were measured by quantitative angiography before and after implantation and at 4-week follow-up, at which time, macrophage accumulation and interruption of the internal elastic lamina was determined. Cross sections of stent segments within the ARED (S+ARED), outside the ARED (S[minus]ARED), and in corresponding segments of the contralateral control stent (SCTRL) were analyzed. Changes in WSS induced by the ARED placement were derived by computational fluid dynamics. Computational fluid dynamics analysis demonstrated that WSS increased from 0.38 to 0.82 N/m 2 in the S+ARED immediately after ARED placement. This augmentation of shear stress was accompanied by (1) lower mean late luminal loss by quantitative angiography ([minus]0.23±0.22 versus [minus]0.58±0.30 mm, P =0.02), (2) reduction in NH (1.48±0.58, 2.46±1.25, and 2.36±1.13 mm 2 , P <0.01, respectively, for S+ARED, S[minus]ARED, and SCTRL), and (3) a reduced inflammation score and a reduced injury score. Increments in shear stress did not change the relationship between injury score and NH or between inflammation score and NH. Conclusions— The newly developed ARED flow divider significantly increases WSS, and this local increment in WSS is accompanied by a local reduction in NH and a local reduction in inflammation and injury. The present study is therefore the first to provide direct evidence for an important modulating role of shear stress in in-stent neointimal hyperplasia.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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