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Percutaneous transvenous cellular cardiomyoplasty

Authors :
Herman K. Gold
Stephen N. Oesterle
Michael McGarry
Boris A. Nasseri
Joseph P. Vacanti
Irina Pomerantseva
John Y. Chang
Stuart L. Houser
Joshua Makower
Craig A. Thompson
Theodore C. Lamson
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 41:1964-1971
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2003.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES The study evaluated a nonsurgical means of intramyocardial cell introduction using the coronary venous system for direct myocardial access and cell delivery. BACKGROUND Direct myocardial cell repopulation has been proposed as a potential method to treat heart failure. METHODS We harvested bone marrow from Yorkshire swine (n = 6; 50 to 60 kg), selected culture-flask adherent cells, labeled them with the gene for green fluorescence protein, expanded them in culture, and resuspended them in a collagen hydrogel. Working through the coronary sinus, a specialized catheter system was easily delivered to the anterior interventricular coronary vein. The composite catheter system (TransAccess) incorporates a phased-array ultrasound tip for guidance and a sheathed, extendable nitinol needle for transvascular myocardial access. A microinfusion (IntraLume) catheter was advanced through the needle, deep into remote myocardium, and the autologous cell-hydrogel suspension was injected into normal heart. Animals were sacrificed at days 0 (n = 2), 14 (n = 1, + 1 control/collagen biogel only), and 28 (n = 2), and the hearts were excised and examined. RESULTS We gained widespread intramyocardial access to the anterior, lateral, septal, apical, and inferior walls from the anterior interventicular coronary vein. No death, cardiac tamponade, ventricular arrhythmia, or other procedural complications occurred. Gross inspection demonstrated no evidence of myocardial perforation, and biogel/black tissue dye was well localized to sites corresponding to fluoroscopic landmarks for delivery. Histologic analysis demonstrated needle and microcatheter tracts and accurate cell-biogel delivery. CONCLUSIONS Percutaneous intramyocardial access is safe and feasible by a transvenous approach through the coronary venous system. The swine offers an opportunity to refine approaches used for cellular cardiomyoplasty.

Details

ISSN :
07351097
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae59beba616ca94f9c2194b890462bc3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0735-1097(03)00397-8