Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology
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Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Oct 1999
Comparative StudyFunctional comparison of the human isolated femoral artery, internal mammary artery, gastroepiploic artery, and saphenous vein.
Human femoral, internal mammary, and gastroepiploic arteries and saphenous veins are used as bypass grafts for coronary surgery or for reconstruction in arterial occlusive disease. We have characterized the contractile responses of these vessels to various agents that are liberated during cardiac or vascular surgery. In organ baths, U46619 (a stable thromboxane A2 mimetic), norepinephrine, endothelin-1, angiotensin II, and KCl caused concentration-dependent contractions in all vessels tested. ⋯ In conclusion, thromboxane A2 appears to be the most potent endogenous constricting agent on different human vascular beds. Our second finding is that saphenous veins are more sensitive to contract to leukotriene C4 and endothelin-1 than arteries. These properties may influence early and (or) long-term vein graft patency.