Reference
Pries AR, Secomb TW. 2014. Making microvascular networks work: angiogenesis, remodeling, and pruning. Physiology (Bethesda). 29:446–55. doi:10.1152/physiol.00012.2014.
Abstract
The adequate and efficient functioning of the microcirculation requires not only numerous vessels providing a large surface area for transport but also a structure that provides short diffusion distances from capillaries to tissue and efficient distribution of convective blood flow. Theoretical models show how a combination of angiogenesis, remodeling, and pruning in response to hemodynamic and metabolic stimuli, termed "angioadaptation," generates well organized, functional networks.