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State of the Art Review: Vascular Remodeling in Hypertension

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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION
卷 36, 期 1, 页码 1-13

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ajh/hpac093

关键词

blood pressure; hypertension; microcirculation; peripheral circulation; remodeling; small resistance arteries; vascular biology

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New noninvasive techniques for assessing structural alteration in small resistance arteries are under development. Antihypertensive treatment can prevent or reverse microvascular alterations. Structural changes in small and large arteries may be interlinked. Evaluation of microvascular structure is important for stratifying cardiovascular risk and assessing the effects of antihypertensive therapy.
Although the gold-standard method for the assessment of structural alteration in small resistance arteries is the evaluation of the MLR by micromyography in bioptic tissues, new, noninvasive techniques are presently under development, focusing mainly on the evaluation of WLR in retinal arterioles. These approaches represent a promising and interesting future perspective. Appropriate antihypertensive treatment is able to prevent the development of microvascular alterations or to induce their regression. Also, conductance arteries may be affected by a remodeling process in hypertension, and a cross-talk may exist between structural changes in the small and large arteries. In conclusion, the evaluation of microvascular structure is ready for clinical prime time, and it could, in the future, represent an evaluation to be performed in the majority of hypertensive patients, to better stratify cardiovascular risk and better evaluate the effects of antihypertensive therapy. However, for this purpose, we need a clear demonstration of the prognostic relevance of noninvasive measures of microvascular structure, in basal conditions and during treatment. Vascular remodeling may be frequently observed in hypertension, as well as in obesity and diabetes mellitus. An increased media to lumen ratio (MLR) or wall to lumen ratio (WLR) in microvessels is the hallmark of hypertension, and may impair organ flow reserve, being relevant in the maintenance and, probably, also in the progressive worsening of hypertensive disease, as well as in the development of hypertension-mediated organ damage/cardiovascular events. The molecular mechanisms underlying the development of vascular remodeling are only partly understood.

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