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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 93, 695-707, Copyright © 1987 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
B van der Lei, CR Wildevuur, F Dijk, EH Blaauw, I Molenaar and P Nieuwenhuis
Microporous, compliant, biodegradable vascular grafts prepared from a
mixture of polyurethane (95% weight) and poly-L-lactic acid (5% weight) can
function as a temporary scaffold for the regeneration of the arterial wall
in small-caliber arteries. This study was undertaken to document the
sequential events leading to this regeneration. Therefore,
polyurethane/poly-L-lactic acid vascular grafts were implanted into the
abdominal aorta of rats (N = 28) and were harvested at regular intervals
from 1 hour up to 12 weeks after implantation. The implants were evaluated
by means of light and electron microscopy. At each time of harvesting, the
implants were patent and showed arterial pulsations. No stenosis or
dilatation was observed. Endothelial cells grew from the adjacent aortic
intima across the anastomoses, from day 6 onward, to form an almost
complete neointima after 6 weeks of implantation. Smooth muscle cells also
grew from the adjacent aortic media over the graft lattice through the
platelet-fibrin coagulum from day 6 onward. The smooth muscle cells,
predominantly longitudinally arranged at week 6, but also circularly
arranged in some areas at week 12, formed a neomedia in which elastic
laminae regenerated. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes and monocytes initially
invaded the graft lattices. Fibroblasts, histiocytes, and capillaries grew
from the perigraft tissue into the polyurethane/poly-L-lactic acid lattices
from day 6 onward, which resulted in the formation of a neoadventitia. The
polyurethane/poly-L-lactic acid lattices started to disintegrate from day
12 onward. The regenerative processes in the disintegrating
polyurethane/poly-L-lactic acid grafts resulted in the formation of
neoarteries, which were of sufficient strength, compliance, and
thromboresistance to function as small-caliber arterial substitutes.
ARTICLES
Sequential studies of arterial wall regeneration in microporous, compliant, biodegradable small-caliber vascular grafts in rats
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