Abstract

Several studies are available addressing the mechanisms of vascular morphogenesis in order to unravel how cooperative cell behavior can follow from the underlying, genetically regulated behavior of endothelial cells and from cell-to-cell and cell-to-extracellular matrix interactions. From the morphological standpoint several aspects of the process are of interest. They include the way the pattern of vessels fills the available tissue space and how the network grows during the angiogenic process, namely how a main trunk divides into smaller branches, and how branching occurs at different distances from the root point of a vascular tree. A third morphological aspect of interest concerns the spatial relationship between vessels and tissue cells able to secrete factors modulating endothelial cells self-organization, thus influencing vascular rearrangement.In the present chapter image analysis methods allowing for a quantitative characterization of these morphological aspects will be detailed and discussed. They are almost based on concepts derived from the theoretical framework represented by spatial statistics.

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