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1 Mayo Clinic College of Medicine
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: miller.virginia{at}mayo.edu.
Aims: Experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that systemic delivery of planktonic forms of nanoparticles (NPs) derived from calcified, diseased human tissue or bovine blood are transmissible particles that exacerbate arterial response to injury. Methods: New Zealand white rabbits in which the endothelium was mechanically removed from one carotid artery were injected intravenously with either saline (control), lipopolysaccharide (LPS; surrogate for sub-clinical infection), hydroxyapatite crystals (HA; surrogate for NP shell), HA crystals exposed to culture media, or planktonic forms of bovine- or human-derived NPs. Carotid arteries were monitored by ultrasonography for five weeks and then removed for histological examination. Results: Uninjured arteries from all animals in each group remained patent with a normal anatomy. Injured arteries from six of eleven animals injected with human-derived NPs occluded and/or calcified; none of the injured arteries from animals in the other groups occluded (n=28; P
0.05). Injured arteries of rabbits injected with LPS or HA crystals developed eccentric hyperplasia. Discontinuous internal elastic laminae and thinning media characterized arteries from animals injected with bovine-derived NPs or cultured HA crystals. Conclusion: Systemic administration of planktonic forms of human-derived NPs exacerbated arterial response to injury distinct from that of bovine-derived NPs and other inflammatory agents.
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