A model for renal arterial branching based on graph theory

2010 
Abstract The kidney is one of the most complicated organs in terms of structure and physiology, in part because it is highly vascularized. The renal vascular development occurs through two mechanisms that sometimes overlap: vasculogenesis and angiogenesis. Here, we consider angiogenesis to model the renal arterial tree with the two processes of vascular angiogenesis: sprouting and splitting. We recognize the vessels are not tubes with ends that get glued but physiological factors are relevant into the vascular development. Our contribution integrates the graph theory and physiological information to derive a quantitative model for the vascular tree in the sense that the vertices and edges represent, respectively, a branching point and a vessel. From such a premise, development of the arterial vascular tree of the kidney is mathematically expressed, including physiological processes as the effect of the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) on the vessel length. A definition of the graph is used to visualize the topology of vascular tree in kidney providing physiological information into the edges. Thus, renal arterial branching is modeled as a graph where edges are labeled and oriented.
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