1989
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1020302
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New Observations on the Healing Process in Prosthetic Substitution of Large Veins by Microporous Grafts - Animal Experiments

Abstract: Based on the experimental experiences in more than 180 implantations of different materials as venous substitutes segments of the inferior vena cava have been replaced in 34 dogs by Polyurethane (low microporosity) and modified e-PTFE prostheses (increased microporosity of 60 microns and 90 microns fibril length). The 12 months patency rate didn't differ between both tested optimized materials and ranged from 43 to 50%. After a follow-up of 12 months the grafts were taken out and analysed by light, immunofluor… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 4 publications
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“…The fibrin layer itself is not as mighty as on knitted Dacron, some times giving a 'ghost impression' of the underlying prosthetic fibres. The outside capsule and scar formation is usually thin and dense [147,148,150] with occasional FBGC wrapping around PU fibres [73]. At 2 weeks the FBGC become more prevalent increasing until week 6 [153].…”
Section: Fibrillar Pu Graftsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The fibrin layer itself is not as mighty as on knitted Dacron, some times giving a 'ghost impression' of the underlying prosthetic fibres. The outside capsule and scar formation is usually thin and dense [147,148,150] with occasional FBGC wrapping around PU fibres [73]. At 2 weeks the FBGC become more prevalent increasing until week 6 [153].…”
Section: Fibrillar Pu Graftsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With very rare exceptions fibrillar PU grafts are largely impenetrable for transmural tissue ingrowth [91,147,148]. Only particularly large inter-fibrillar spaces allow complete fibro-connective tissue penetration throughout the wall thickness [49,73,93].…”
Section: Fibrillar Pu Graftsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…After implantation, the mid‐graft region of the fibrillar polyurethane is covered by a fibrin layer that is thinner than on knitted Dacron, and the outer surface is encapsulated by thin and dense scar formation containing FBGC (Zilla et al ., ). Therefore, fibrillar polyurethane grafts are largely impenetrable for transmural tissue ingrowth (Hess et al ., ; Kogel et al ., ). Instead, some ingrowth occurs in microporous foamy polyurethanes whereas it is possible to reduce the inflammatory FBGC reaction by increasing pore size (Zilla et al ., ).…”
Section: Focus On Cardiovascular Fieldmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Despite these encouraging results, transmural growth of perigraft capillaries has not resulted in complete graft healing in humans. [13][14][15] The influence of porosity on graft healing, particularly ePTFE graft healing, remains unclear, even though several investigators [16][17][18] have suggested that the mechanisms of endothelial coverage of prosthetic surfaces can be radically altered simply by changing the porosity of the graft. In the clinical setting, all synthetic grafts derive limited luminal endothelium from the cut edges of the adjacent artery.…”
Section: Microsurgery 20:15-21 2000mentioning
confidence: 99%