The purpose of this study was to compare the degree of endothelial cell attachment to different synthetic vascular graft materials. Human microvessel endothelial cells were labelled with indium-111-oxine, injected into 9 different vascular grafts and left to adhere for 40 min. Unattached cells were removed and radioactivity of the grafts measured. Grafts were flushed with 20 ml phosphate-buffered saline during 5 s to remove cells with poor attachment and radioactivity was measured again. Attachment differed between the grafts. In order of decreasing attachment the grafts were albumin-coated Dacron (47%), preclotted Dacron (35–44%), gelatin-coated Dacron (20%), gelatin-coated polyurethane (17%), collagen-coated Dacron (12%), preclotted expanded polytetrafluoro-ethylene (ePTFE; 3%). Albumin-coated Dacron showed the highest degree of cell attachment of ePTFE the lowest. Statistically significant differences exist between ePTFE and all other grafts and between albumin-coated and collagen-coated Dacron, gelatin-coated polyurethane and gelatin-coated Dacron.
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