Published: 31 October 2023
Author(s): Carolina De Ciuceis, Claudia Agabiti Rosei, Paolo Malerba, Claudia Rossini, Matteo Nardin, Giulia Chiarini, Francesca Famà, Matteo Lemoli, Mattia Baresi, Alina Petelca, Chiara Bortoluzzi, Enzo Porteri, Massimo Salvetti, Maria Lorenza Muiesan, Enrico Agabiti Rosei, Damiano Rizzoni
Issue: May 2024
Section: Original Article

The main characteristic of essential hypertension is the increase in peripheral vascular resistance to blood flow, located mostly in small arteries with a lumen diameter of 100 to 350 μm and in smaller arterioles, with diameters < 100 μm [1–3]. The increased peripheral resistance may be ascribed, in large part, to the consequences of structural (usually defined as vascular remodeling) and functional alterations in the resistance vasculature [1–3]. Most of the information available in human beings regarding the clinical and also prognostic role of microvascular structural alterations, in terms of onset and progression of hypertension-mediated organ damage, have been obtained with locally invasive techniques, namely by performing biopsies of subcutaneous fat and dissecting subcutaneous small resistance arteries [4,5].

Newsletters

Stay informed on our latest news!

CAPTCHA

This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.