Mj. Merrilees et al., FLUOROPROBE QUANTIFICATION OF VIABLE AND NONVIABLE CELLS IN HUMAN CORONARY AND INTERNAL THORACIC ARTERIES SAMPLED AT AUTOPSY, Journal of vascular research, 32(6), 1995, pp. 371-377
Viable and non-viable cells in coronary and internal thoracic arteries
, collected at autopsy 7-24 h post-mortem from individuals 15-81 years
of age, were detected using the fixable fluoroprobes 5-chloromethylfl
uorescein diacetate (green) and ethidium homodimer-l (orange/red). Via
bility status of individual endothelial and smooth muscle cells was co
nfirmed by simultaneous autoradiographic detection of incorporated [H-
3]glucosamine. Twenty-five percent of coronary and 42% of internal tho
racic arteries contained viable cells up to 24 h following death. For
the majority of viable vessels the mean percentage of viable cells ran
ged between 60 and 80% with no significant difference between coronary
and internal thoracic arteries and no relationship with either age of
the donor or with time to autopsy. Non-viable cells were usually dist
ributed fairly evenly amongst viable cells but this pattern could not
be assumed. In a number of vessels non-viable cells were variably clus
tered in different regions of vessel wall. These findings confirm that
vessels sampled at autopsy can be used for metabolic studies with the
caveat that assessment of cell viability is a necessary prerequisite
for interpretation of results.