Implantation of decellularized small-caliber vascular xenografts with and without surface heparin treatment

Xue-Ning Wang, Chang-Zhi Chen*, Min Yang, Y. John Gu

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    39 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Heparin treatment of decellularized xenografts has been reported to reduce graft thrombogenicity. However, little is known about the in vivo comparison of heparin-treated with non-heparin-treated xenografts, especially for small-caliber vascular implants. We implanted either a heparin-treated or a non-heparin-treated canine carotid artery as bilateral carotid xenograft in rabbits (n = 24). Small-caliber xenografts (3 similar to 4 mm) were decellularized by enzymatic and detergent extraction and were further covalently linked with heparin. During implantation, thrombosis rate was 4% in the heparin-treated xenografts and 25% in the non-heparin-treated xenografts after 3 weeks (P <0.05). After 6 months, it was 8 versus 58%, respectively (P <0.01). Both heparin-treated and non-heparin-treated xenografts harvested at the end of 3 and 6 months showed a satisfactory cellular reconstruction of either smooth muscle cells or endothelial cells. These results indicate that heparin treatment of the small-caliber decellularized xenograft reduces the in vivo thrombogenicity. Both heparin-treated and non-heparin-treated xenografts seem to undergo a similar cellular remodeling process up to 6 months.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)99-104
    Number of pages6
    JournalARTIFICIAL ORGANS
    Volume31
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb-2007

    Keywords

    • heparin
    • decellularized
    • small-caliber
    • vascular
    • xenograft
    • implantation
    • TISSUE
    • GRAFTS
    • SCAFFOLD
    • MATRIX
    • BIOMATERIALS
    • DEPOSITION
    • VEIN

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