J Reconstr Microsurg 1993; 9(3): 173-181
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1006642
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

© 1993 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.

Use of the 3M Precise Microvascular Anastomotic System in Grafting 1-mm Diameter Arteries with Polytetrafluoroethylene Prostheses: A Long-Term Study

Marco Lanzetta, Earl R. Owen
  • Microsurgery Centre, Microsearch Foundation of Australia, Sydney
Further Information

Publication History

Accepted for publication 1993

Publication Date:
08 March 2008 (online)

ABSTRACT

The 3M Precise Microvascular Anastomotic System has had an experimental long-term testing for the first time in polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) 1-mm diameter arterial grafts. The grafts were placed in the infrarenal aorta of 48 rats. At different time intervals (2 weeks, 16 weeks and 1 year), each section containing a graft and its pair of anastomotic devices was removed and processed for light and scanning electron microscopy, with the aid of a newly-designed device. Eighty-three percent of the mechanically anastomosed grafts were found to be patent. Only 14.8 percent of the grafts harvested at 16 weeks or 1 year showed neo-endothelial lining on the inner surface of the graft. A constant finding of this study was the marked atrophy of the aortic media within the devices, that was progressively evident from 2 weeks to 1 year. A network of capillaries within the graft walls was present at 16 weeks. In one case, a large capillary was found to traverse the graft wall and to reach the luminal surface, suggesting that transmural capillaries may contribute to the formation of neo-intima in 1-mm PTFE grafts.

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