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Temporary luminal arteriotomy seal: III. Postmortem arteriosclerotic human coronary artery

Authors :
Paul F. Gründeman
Yvonne J.M van der Helm
Cornelius Borst
Robin H. Heijmen
Chantal M. Mouës
Gerard Pasterkamp
Source :
The Annals of thoracic surgery. 67(1)
Publication Year :
1999

Abstract

Background . Recently, we described a temporary luminal arteriotomy seal that provided a bloodless arteriotomy without obstructing recipient artery blood flow during bypass grafting in nonarteriosclerotic porcine arteries. This postmortem study assessed the sealing properties in irregular arteriosclerotic human coronary arteries. Methods . Three hearts were obtained from donated corpses within 24 hours of death. The coronary arteries were pressure-perfused at 60 mm Hg with citrated porcine blood. At 15 anastomosis sites in four different coronary arteries, an end-to-side anastomosis was created using a 200-μm-thick polyurethane seal. Adequacy of sealing was determined at perfusion pressures of 60, 40, and 20 mm Hg. Results . After insertion, the arteriotomy was sealed instantaneously in 10 of 15 anastomoses. After repositioning, complete sealing with a bloodless operative field was obtained in all cases. Low intracoronary transmural pressure did not impede sealing. In 8 of 15 anastomoses, minor leakage without obscuring the arteriotomy edges was observed during anastomotic suturing. Histologic examination revealed no intimal tear or dissection caused by the anastomotic procedure. Conclusions . In postmortem-obtained arteriosclerotic human coronary arteries, the temporary luminal arteriotomy seal provided optimal visualization of the coronary anastomosis site in combination with persistent distal perfusion.

Details

ISSN :
00034975
Volume :
67
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of thoracic surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4176f417283ea214f7e6e3f19c9e2e8d