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1.
Surgery ; 171(4): 1100-1107, 2022 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34839934

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Ischemic injury during the agonal period of donation after circulatory death donors remains a significant barrier to increasing abdominal transplants. A major obstacle has been the inability to improve visceral perfusion, while at the same time respecting the ethics of the organ donor. A retrievable dual-chamber stentgraft could potentially isolate the organ perfusion from systemic hypotension and hypoxia, without increasing cardiac work or committing the donor. METHODS: Retrievable dumbbell-shaped stents were laser welded from nitinol wire and covered with polytetrafluoroethylene. Yorkshire pigs were assigned to either agonal control or dumbbell-shaped dual-chamber stentgraft. A central lumen maintained aortic flow, while an outer visceral chamber was perfused with oxygenated blood. A 1-hour agonal phase of hypoxia and hypotension was simulated. Stents were removed by simple sheath advancement. Cardiac monitoring, labs, and visceral flow were recorded followed by recovery of the animal to a goal of 48 hours. RESULTS: Cardiac stress did not increase during stent deployment. Visceral pO2 and flow were dramatically improved in stented animal relative to control animals. Five of 7 control animals were killed after renal failure complications, whereas all stent animals survived. Histology confirmed increased ischemic changes among control kidneys compared to stented animals. CONCLUSION: A dual-chamber stent improved outcomes after a simulated agonal phase. The stent did not increase cardiac work, thus respecting a key ethical consideration. The ability of a dual-chamber stent to prevent ischemia during organ recovery may become a powerful tool to address the critical donor organ shortage.


Assuntos
Hipotensão , Isquemia Quente , Animais , Morte , Humanos , Hipotensão/complicações , Hipóxia/complicações , Isquemia , Preservação de Órgãos , Perfusão , Stents , Suínos , Doadores de Tecidos
2.
J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord ; 6(5): 646-656, 2018 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30119820

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Early hemorrhage control before the operating room is essential to reduce the significant mortality associated with traumatic injuries of the vena cava. Conventional approaches present logistical challenges on the battlefield or in the trauma bay. A retrievable stent graft would allow rapid hemorrhage control in the preoperative setting when endovascular expertise is not immediately available and without committing a patient to the limitations of current permanent stents. This study details a refined retrievable Rescue stent for percutaneous delivery that was examined in a porcine survival model of penetrating caval hemorrhage. METHODS: A retrievable caval stent was reduced in delivery profile to a 9F sheath using finite element analysis. The final stent was constructed with a "petal and stem" design using nitinol wire followed by covering with polytetrafluoroethylene. Seven Yorkshire pigs (79-86 kg) underwent 22F injury of the infrarenal vena cava with intentional class II hemorrhage (1200 mL). Percutaneous deployment of the Rescue stent was used to temporize hemorrhage for 60 minutes, followed by resuscitation with cell saver blood and permanent caval repair. Hemorrhage control was documented with photography and angiography. Vital signs were recorded and laboratory values were measured out to 48 hours postoperatively. Data were examined with a repeated-measures analysis of variance. RESULTS: The profile of the caval Rescue stent was successfully reduced from 16F to 9F while remaining within fracture and shape memory limits for nitinol. In addition, both rapid deployment and recapture were preserved. Following intentional hemorrhage after caval injury, animals revealed a significant drop in mean arterial pressure (average, 30 mm Hg), acidosis, and elevated lactate level compared with before injury. Compared with uncontrolled hemorrhage, which resulted in death in <9 minutes, the Rescue stent achieved hemorrhage control in <1 minute after venous access in all seven animals. All animals were successfully recovered after permanent repair. There was no significant change in levels of transaminases, bilirubin, creatinine, or hemoglobin at 48 hours compared with preinjury baseline. CONCLUSIONS: A retrievable Rescue stent achieved rapid percutaneous hemorrhage control after a significant traumatic injury of the vena cava and allowed successful recovery of all injured animals. Further development of this approach may have utility in preoperative damage control of caval injuries.


Assuntos
Procedimentos Endovasculares/instrumentação , Hemorragia/cirurgia , Hemostasia Cirúrgica/instrumentação , Stents , Veia Cava Inferior/lesões , Veia Cava Inferior/cirurgia , Ligas , Angiografia , Animais , Procedimentos Endovasculares/métodos , Análise de Elementos Finitos , Polímeros de Fluorcarboneto , Hemostasia Cirúrgica/métodos , Modelos Animais , Desenho de Prótese , Suínos , Veia Cava Inferior/diagnóstico por imagem
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