Abstract

The strategic location of the endothelium between the flowing intraluminal blood and the vascular smooth muscle cells in the blood vessel wall implies that it should play a crucial role in the blood flow regulation of vascular tone. However, the nature of many of the cellular mechanisms involved in this inter-relationship remain speculative and controversial. The author's hypothesis is that flow can initiate two responses as the result of shear stress activation of a common sensor -the characteristic response is dilation but constriction occurs at lower and can also occur at higher tone levels. At lower levels of tone, flow-contraction and -dilation interact influencing wall tone towards a balance point. Current theories of flow sensing include deformation of viscoelastic molecules attached to the lumenal surface of the endothelium, deformation of the lumenal surface of endothelial cells and flow-dependent, endogenous agonist -lumenal endothelial surface receptor interaction. There are a number of ways in...

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