Erschienen in:
14.06.2019 | Laboratory Investigation
Histologic Analysis with the Newly Designed Exoskeleton Seal® Stent-Graft in the Porcine Abdominal Aorta
verfasst von:
Jung-Hoon Park, Young Kwon Cho, Keun Her, Yong Sun Jeon, Jeong Ho Kim, Tae-Seok Seo, Myung Gyu Song
Erschienen in:
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology
|
Ausgabe 9/2019
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Abstract
Purpose
To investigate the technical feasibility of a novel exoskeleton Seal® stent-graft and analyze early histologic changes in the porcine abdominal aorta.
Materials and Methods
Six pigs received an abdominal stent-graft (Group I), and six received an iliac branch stent-graft (Group II). Groups were subdivided as follows: Group Ia, which received three bifurcated main-body stent-grafts; Group Ib, which received three bifurcated main-body stent-grafts with both iliac graft-stents; Group IIa, which received three simple uni-iliac tapered stent-grafts; and Group IIb, which received three uni-iliac tapered tapered stent-grafts with right straight limb and left branched limb. Statistical analyses were performed with the Wilcoxon signed-rank test and mixed-model regression analysis.
Results
The primary technical success rate (< 24 h) was 83% because of two acute thromboses in the lumen of the stented abdominal aorta immediately after stent-graft placement. At 4 weeks, late thrombosis occurred in two pigs. Higher mean neointimal hyperplasia areas (23.5% vs. 16.2%; P = .047), neointimal hyperplasia thicknesses (545.5 μm vs. 422.2 μm; P = .001), and degrees of collagen deposition (2.71 vs. 2.33; P = .002) were observed at the bare-metal stent-graft compared with the proximal exoskeleton portion of the stent-graft, with no significant differences between the patent and occluded groups or among the four types of stent-grafts.
Conclusions
The exoskeleton stent-graft demonstrates 66% of patency rate during 1-month follow-up due to four cases of thromboses; however, the endothelialization on the junction of proximal graft showed no significant differences between the patent and occluded groups. Further studies should investigate long-term outcomes with prolonged neointimal hyperplasia.