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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 105, 796-804, Copyright © 1993 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
Y Noishiki, Y Tomizawa, Y Yamane, T Okoshi, S Satoh and A Matsumoto
We have previously demonstrated rapid and complete endothelialization in
synthetic fabric vascular prostheses that have been pretreated with
autologous venous tissue fragments. However, significant thrombogenicity
has been a major problem when this method has been applied to
small-diameter grafts. By masking the positively charged collagen fibrils
in the tissue fragments with negatively charged heparin, we were able to
overcome this problem. A canine jugular vein was resected, minced into
tissue fragments, and suspended. This mixture was sieved through the wall
of a highly porous vascular prosthesis with a water porosity value of 4,000
ml/cm2 per minute by pressurized injection, which caused the tissue
fragments to be trapped in the graft wall. Tissue-fragmented grafts (7 mm
inside diameter, 5.7 cm long) were implanted into the thoracic aorta of 35
dogs. In addition, tissue- fragmented grafts of small diameter (4 mm inside
diameter, 3.5 cm long) were pretreated with heparin and implanted into the
carotid arteries of 16 dogs (32 grafts). Preclotted grafts without tissue
fragmentation were implanted into the thoracic aorta (25 dogs) and carotid
arteries (6 dogs, 12 grafts) as controls. Grafts were explanted from 1 to
495 days after implantation. New arterial wall formation was complete
throughout the tissue-fragmented grafts within 2 weeks; however, in the
control grafts, neointima formation was limited to the anastomotic sites
even after 2 months. Twenty small-caliber tissue-fragmented grafts that
were pretreated with heparin in the carotid position were patent, but all
the control grafts were occluded within 1 week. These results demonstrate
that neointima formation can be enhanced in synthetic fabric prostheses;
furthermore, long-term patency of vascular grafts of small caliber is
possible in dogs with this tissue- fragmentation technique.
ARTICLES
Acceleration of neointima formation in vascular prostheses by transplantation of autologous venous tissue fragments. Application to small-diameter grafts
First Department of Surgery, Yokohama City University, School of Medicine, Japan.
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