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International Journal of Experimental Pathology logoLink to International Journal of Experimental Pathology
. 1990 Aug;71(4):573–586.

Nicotine and cigarette smoking: effects on the ultrastructure of aortic endothelium.

R M Pittilo 1, H A Bull 1, S Gulati 1, P M Rowles 1, C M Blow 1, S J Machin 1, N Woolf 1
PMCID: PMC2002282  PMID: 2400739

Abstract

The aortic endothelium from rats has been examined by scanning (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) following nicotine administration or cigarette smoking. Nicotine was administered to rats by subcutaneous injections at concentrations of 1, 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg or by continuous subcutaneous pumps delivering a solution of 0.54 g/ml of nicotine at the rate of 1 microliter/h for 7 days. Animals were exposed to fresh smoke from eight cigarettes, each yielding 19 mg tar and 1.5 mg nicotine. Twenty minutes after subcutaneous injections, no endothelial abnormalities were evident by SEM, apart from at the high dose where minimal endothelial damage was seen. Limited endothelial damage was discerned following nicotine infusion and this consisted of microvillus formation, platelet adhesion and some cell separation. TEM revealed no endothelial changes in any of the animals. Cigarette smoking, however, resulted in considerable endothelial morphological changes consisting of the formation of blebs, microvillus-like projections, increased numbers of plasmalemmal vesicles and an increase in the numbers of Weibel-Palade bodies. The results suggest that components of cigarette smoke other than nicotine are responsible for the endothelial cell changes associated with smoking.

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Selected References

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