Muscle-like cells block blood flow after a heart attack

Cells called pericytes limit blood flowing back into capillaries following a heart attack.

eLife
Health and Disease
Published in
2 min readJan 15, 2018

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Heart attacks occur when one of the arteries supplying blood to the heart muscle becomes blocked, usually by a blood clot. Doctors unblock the artery and insert an expanding metal cage called a stent to keep it unblocked. This restores blood flow through the artery. Unfortunately, blood flow often does not return to smaller downstream blood vessels called capillaries. This can lead to further damage to the heart.

Scientists have not been able to find a way to reliably open up those capillaries after a heart attack because it is not clear exactly what is keeping them closed. Muscle-like cells called pericytes, which wrap around the capillaries, are one possible culprit for the blockages. Pericytes narrow capillaries in the brain after stroke in animal experiments. These cells are also present on heart capillaries, but scientists do not know much about them.

Now, O’Farrell, Mastitskaya, Hammond-Haley et al. show that pericytes are partly responsible for limiting blood flow in capillaries after a heart attack in rats. In the experiments, blood flow through an artery feeding the hearts of anaesthetized rats was restricted, simulating a heart attack. After the blood flow was later restored, 40% of the animal’s capillaries remained blocked. Many blockages occurred near pericytes that had narrowed the capillary preventing blood flow. Treating the rats with a drug called adenosine, which relaxes the pericytes, reduced capillary blockages and increased blood flow in the heart.

Although adenosine could help to restore blood flow in the capillaries after a heart attack, it may also relax muscles around arteries and lower blood pressure, and so it may not be an ideal treatment. More studies are needed to determine whether drugs that target only the pericytes could complement existing heart attack treatments that unblock the arteries. If these studies are successful, pericyte-targeting drugs might prevent serious complications after a heart attack, including heart failure, heart rhythm abnormalities and future heart attacks.

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