Sex-related differences in wall remodeling and intraluminal thrombus resolution in a rat saccular aneurysm model

Author:

Morel Sandrine12,Karol Agnieszka3,Graf Vanessa3,Pelli Graziano1,Richter Henning4,Sutter Esther1,Braunersreuther Vincent5,Frösen Juhana6,Bijlenga Philippe2,Kwak Brenda R.17,Nuss Katja M.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology and Immunology and

2. Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, and

3. Musculoskeletal Research Unit and

4. Diagnostic Imaging Research Unit, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zürich, Switzerland; and

5. Division of Clinical Pathology, Diagnostic Department, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva;

6. Hemorrhagic Brain Pathology Research Group, Department of Neurosurgery, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, Finland

7. Department of Medical Specializations—Cardiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva;

Abstract

OBJECTIVEIntracranial aneurysms (IAs) are more often diagnosed in women. Hormones and vessel geometry, which influences wall shear stress, may affect pathophysiological processes of the arterial wall. Here, the authors investigated sex-related differences in the remodeling of the aneurysm wall and in intraluminal thrombus resolution.METHODSA well-characterized surgical side-wall aneurysm model was used in female, male, and ovariectomized rats. Decellularized grafts were used to model highly degenerated and decellularized IA walls and native grafts to model healthy IA walls. Aneurysm growth and thrombus composition were analyzed at 1, 7, 14, and 28 days. Sex-related differences in vessel wall remodeling were compared with human IA dome samples of men and pre- and postmenopausal women.RESULTSAt 28 days, more aneurysm growth was observed in ovariectomized rats than in males or non-ovariectomized female rats. The parent artery size was larger in male rats than in female or ovariectomized rats, as expected. Wall inflammation increased over time in all groups and was most severe in the decellularized female and ovariectomized groups at 28 days compared with the male group. Likewise, in these groups the most elastin fragmentation was seen at 28 days. In female rats, on days 1, 7, and 14, the intraluminal thrombus was mainly composed of red blood cells and fibrin. On days 14 and 28, macrophage and smooth muscle cell invasion inside the thrombus was shown, leading to the removal of red blood cells and deposition of collagen and elastin. On days 14 and 28, similar profiles of thrombus reorganization were observed in male and ovariectomized female rats. However, collagen content in thrombi and vessel wall macrophage content were higher in aneurysms of male rats at 28 days than in those of female rats. On day 28, thrombus coverage by endothelial cells was lower in ovariectomized than in female or male rats. Finally, analysis of human IA domes showed that endothelial cell coverage was lower in men and postmenopausal women than in younger women.CONCLUSIONSAneurysm growth and intraluminal thrombus resolution show sex-dependent differences. While certain processes (endothelial cell coverage and collagen deposition) point to a strong hormonal dependence, others (wall inflammation and aneurysm growth) seem to be influenced by both hormones and parent artery size.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference41 articles.

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4. @neurIST – chronic disease management through integration of heterogeneous data and computer-interpretable guideline services;Dunlop;Stud Health Technol Inform,2008

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